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{{Short description|Métis leader in Canada (1844–1885)}} | |||
:] for details of the ].'' | |||
{{About|the Métis leader in Canada}} | |||
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{{Featured article}} | |||
'''Louis Riel''' (], ] – ], ]) was a ], a founder of the province of ], and leader of the ] people of the ]. He led two ]s against the Canadian government that sought to preserve Métis rights and culture as their homelands in the Northwest came progressively under the ] ]. | |||
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2022}} | |||
{{Infobox officeholder | |||
| name = Louis Riel | |||
| image = Louis Riel.jpg{{!}}border | |||
| office = President of the ] | |||
| term_start1 = 27 December 1869 | |||
| term_end1 = 24 June 1870 | |||
| riding2 = ] | |||
| parliament2 = Canadian | |||
| predecessor2 = ] | |||
| successor3 = ] | |||
| term_start2 = 13 October 1873 | |||
| term_end2 = 16 April 1874 | |||
| term_start3 = 13 September 1874 | |||
| term_end3 = 25 February 1875 | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1844|10|22}} | |||
| birth_place = ], Red River Colony, Rupert's Land | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1885|11|16|1844|10|22}} | |||
| death_place = ], North-West Territories, Canada | |||
| occupation = | |||
| spouse = {{marriage|Marguerite Monet ] Bellehumeur|1881}} | |||
| children = 2 | |||
| signature = Louis Riel Signature.svg | |||
| resting_place = ] | |||
}} | |||
'''Louis Riel ''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|l|uː|i|_|r|i|ˈ|ɛ|l}}; {{IPA|fr|lwi ʁjɛl|lang}}; 22 October 1844 – 16 November 1885) was a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of ], and a political leader of the ] people. He led two resistance movements against the ] and its first prime minister ]. Riel sought to defend Métis rights and identity as the ] came progressively under the Canadian sphere of influence. | |||
The first such resistance was the ] of ]–]. The ] established by Riel ultimately negotiated the terms under which the modern ] of ] entered the ]. Riel was forced into exile in the ] as a result of the controversial ] of ] during the ]. Despite this, he is frequently referred to as the "Father of Manitoba." While a ], he was elected three times to the ], although he never assumed his seat. During these years, he was frustrated by having to remain in exile despite his growing belief that he was a ] leader and prophet, a belief which would later resurface and influence his actions. He married in ] while in ] in ], and fathered three children. He became a naturalized American citizen and was actively involved in the Republican party. | |||
The first resistance movement led by Riel was the ] of 1869–1870. The ] established by Riel ultimately negotiated the terms under which the new province of Manitoba entered the ]. However, while carrying out the resistance, Riel had a Canadian nationalist, ], executed. Riel soon fled to the United States to escape prosecution. He was elected three times as ] of the ], but, fearing for his life, never took his seat. During these years in exile he came to believe that he was a divinely chosen leader and prophet. He married in 1881 while in exile in the ]. | |||
Riel returned to what is now the province of ] to represent Métis grievances to the ]. This resistance escalated into a military confrontation known as the ] of ]. It ended in his ], ], and eventual ] on a charge of ]. Riel was viewed sympathetically in ] regions of Canada, and his execution had a lasting influence on relations between the province of ] and ] Canada. Whether seen as a ] or a traitor, he remains one of the most complex, controversial, and ultimately tragic figures in the ]. | |||
In 1884 Riel was called upon by the Métis leaders in ] to help resolve longstanding grievances with the Canadian government. He returned to Canada and led an armed conflict with government forces: the ] of 1885. Defeated at the ], Riel was imprisoned in Regina where he was ] of ]. Despite protests, popular appeals and the jury's call for clemency, Riel was executed by ]. Riel was seen as a heroic victim by ]; his execution had a lasting negative impact on Canada, polarizing the new nation along ethno-religious lines. The Métis were marginalized in the Prairie provinces by the increasingly English-dominated majority. A long-term effect of these actions was the bitter alienation felt by ] across Canada, and their anger against the repression by their countrymen.<ref>{{harvnb |Bumsted|1992|pages=xiii, 31}}</ref> | |||
HEY ROSS HOW'S YOUR PROJECT GOING! | |||
Riel's historical reputation has long been polarized between portrayals as a dangerous religious fanatic and rebel opposed to the Canadian nation, and, by contrast, as a charismatic leader intent on defending his Métis people from the unfair encroachments by the federal government eager to give Orangemen-dominated Ontario settlers priority access to land. Riel has received among the most formal organizational and academic scrutiny of any figure in Canadian history.<ref name=bumsted-1987>{{Cite journal |last= Bumsted |first= J. M. |title=The 'Mahdi' of Western Canada: Lewis Riel and His Papers |journal=The Beaver |year= 1987 |volume= 67 |issue=4 |pages=47–54 }}</ref> | |||
==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
] |
] | ||
The ] was a ] territory administered by the ] (HBC). At the mid-19th-century the settlement was largely inhabited by ] people of mixed ]-European descent. Their ancestors were for the most part Scottish and English men married to ] women, and ] men married to ] (plains ]) women.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |encyclopedia = The Canadian Encyclopedia | first1=J. M. |last1=Bumsted |first2=Julie |last2=Smyth | title = Red River Colony |date=25 March 2015|url =https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/red-river-colony }}</ref> | |||
Louis Riel was born in 1844 in his grandparents' small one-room home in ] near the fork of the Red and Seine rivers.<ref>{{harvnb|Hamon|2019|page=32}}</ref><ref>{{cite report|title=Riel Family: Home and Lifestyle at St-Vital, 1860–1910|id= Report No. 379 |first=Diane |last=Payment |url=http://parkscanadahistory.com/series/mrs/379.pdf |year=1980 |publisher=Parks Canada |page= 32}}</ref> Riel was the eldest of eleven children in a locally well-respected family. His father, who was of Franco-] Métis descent, had gained prominence in this community by organizing a group that supported ], a Métis arrested and tried for challenging the HBC's historical trade monopoly.<ref name=Thomas-1982>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Thomas|first=Lewis H. |orig-year=1982 |year=2016|url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/riel_louis_1844_85_11E.html |title=Riel, Louis (1844–85) |encyclopedia =Dictionary of Canadian Biography |volume=11 }}</ref><ref name=senior>{{cite encyclopedia|last =Morton |first=W. L. |year=1976 |url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/riel_louis_1817_64_9E.html |title=Riel, Louis (1817–64) |encyclopedia=Dictionary of Canadian Biography |volume=9 }}</ref> Sayer's eventual release due to agitations by Louis Sr.'s group effectively ended the monopoly, and the name Riel was therefore well known in the Red River area. His mother was the daughter of ] and ], one of the earliest White families to settle in Red River in 1812. The Riels were noted for their devout Catholicism and strong family ties.<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|1963|pages= 13–20}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Hamon|2019|page=30}}</ref> | |||
Riel began his schooling at age seven,<ref name=mitchell>{{cite web|first=W.O.|last=Mitchell|date=1 February 1952|title=The Riddle of Louis Riel Part 1|work=Maclean's|url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1952/2/1/the-riddle-of-louis-riel|archive-date=30 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201030114602/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1952/2/1/the-riddle-of-louis-riel|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=Goldsborough>{{cite web|first=Gordon |last= Goldsborough|date= 16 February 2020|title=Louis 'David' Riel (1844–1885)|work=Memorable Manitobans |url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/people/riel_l.shtml|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society}}</ref> and by age ten he attended St. Boniface Catholic schools, including eventually a school run by the ].<ref name=shsba>{{cite web |date=2020 |publisher=Société historique de Saint-Boniface / Centre du patrimoine | title =Louis Riel – One Life, One Vision |url= https://shsb.mb.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Louis_Riel_Biography.pdf | accessdate =8 December 2020}}</ref> At age thirteen he came to the attention of Bishop ], who was eagerly promoting the priesthood for talented young Métis.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> In 1858 Taché arranged for Riel to attend the ].<ref name=Thomas-1982/> Descriptions of him at the time indicate that he was a fine scholar of languages, science, and philosophy.<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|1963|pages=26–28}}</ref> While a good student, he was also hot-tempered, extreme in his views, intolerant of criticism and opposition, and not opposed to arguing with his teachers.<ref name=markson>{{cite journal |last1=Markson |first1=ER |date=1965 |title=The Life and Death of Louis Riel a Study in Forensic Psychiatry Part 1 – A Psychoanalytic Commentary |url= |journal=Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal |volume=10 |issue=4 |pages=246–252 |doi=10.1177/070674376501000404|pmid=14341671 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
Following news of his father's premature death in 1864, Riel lost interest in the priesthood and withdrew from the college in March 1865. For a time, he continued his studies as a day student in the convent of the ], but was soon asked to leave, following breaches of discipline.<ref name=shsba/> During Riel's period of mourning of his father, he believed that Louis Riel was dead and he himself was David Mordecai, a Jew from Marseilles, and as David, he was not eligible to the immense inheritance of his father (which, in fact, was of little value). Seized with religious fervour, he announced that he was going to form a new religious movement.<ref name=markson/> He remained in Montreal for over a year, living at the home of his aunt, Lucie Riel. Impoverished by the death of his father, Riel took employment as a law clerk in the Montreal office of ].<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref name=Stanley-2013>{{cite encyclopedia |first1=George F. G. |last1=Stanley |last2=Gaudry |first2=Adam|url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/louis-riel/ |title=Louis Riel |encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia |date=9 May 2016}}</ref> During this time he was involved in a failed romance with a young woman named Marie–Julie Guernon. This progressed to the point of Riel having signed a contract of marriage, but his fiancée's family opposed her involvement with a Métis, and the engagement was soon broken. Compounding this disappointment, Riel found legal work unpleasant and, by early 1866, he had resolved to leave ].<ref name=shsba/><ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|1963|page= 33}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = Louis Riel| year =2006 | publisher =Métis Nation of Ontario | url = http://www.metisnation.org/culture/Riel/home.html| archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20070707200538/http://www.metisnation.org/culture/Riel/home.html | archivedate =7 July 2007 }}</ref> Some of his friends said later that he worked odd jobs in ], while staying with poet ],<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|Huel|Martel|Flanagan|Campbell|1985|loc= pp. xxv & xxvi, Stanley's Foreword: "The Fréchette experience is, however, open to question."}}</ref> and wrote poems himself in the manner of ], and that he was briefly employed as a clerk in ], before returning to the Red River settlement on 26 July 1868.<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|1963|pages=13–34}}</ref> | |||
The ] was a community in ] nominally administered by the ] (HBC), and largely inhabited by ] tribes and the ], an ] of ] ], ], ], ], ], and ] descent. Louis Riel was born there in 1844, near modern ], Manitoba, to ] and Julie Lagimodière. | |||
==Red River Resistance== | |||
Riel was the eldest of eleven children in a locally well-respected French Canadian-Métis family—his father had gained prominence in this community by organising a group that supported ], a Métis imprisoned for challenging the ]'s historical trade monopoly. Sayer's eventual release as a result of agitations by Louis Sr.'s group is credited with ending the monopoly, and the name Riel was therefore well known in the Red River. His mother was the daughter of ] and ], one of the earliest white families to settle in the Red River Settlement in ]. The Riels were noted for their devout Catholicism and strong family ties. | |||
{{Main|Red River Rebellion}} | |||
The majority population of the Red River had historically been Métis and First Nations people. Upon his return, Riel found that religious, nationalistic, and racial tensions were exacerbated by an influx of ] Protestant settlers from Ontario. The political situation was also uncertain, as ongoing negotiations for the transfer of Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company to Canada had not addressed the political terms of transfer.<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref name=rrr/> Bishop Taché and the HBC governor ] both warned the Macdonald government that the lack of consultation and consideration of Métis views would precipitate unrest.<ref>{{cite journal |title =Bishop Taché and the Confederation of Manitoba, 1969–1970 |url =http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/tacheconfederation.shtml |last = Dorge |first =Lionel |journal =MHS Transactions |series= 3 |number =26 |year=1969 }}</ref><ref name=brodbeck>{{cite news|url=https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/the-riel-deal-unfriendly-manitoba-566177611.html|newspaper=Winnipeg Free Press|title=The Riel deal|last=Brodbeck|first=Tom|date=13 December 2019}}</ref> Finally, the Canadian minister of public works, ], ordered a survey of the area. The arrival of a survey party on 20 August 1869 increased anxiety among the Métis as the survey was being carried out as a grid system of townships (an American system) that cut across existing Métis river lots.<ref name=rrr/><ref>{{cite journal | title =The Red River Rebellion and J. S. Dennis, 'Lieutenant and Conservator of the Peace'| url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/03/dennis_js.shtml | last=Read | first =Colin |journal=Manitoba History |number=3 |year=1982}}</ref><ref name=Read-1982>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Read|first=Colin|year=1982|url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/dennis_john_stoughton_1820_85_11E.html |title=Dennis, John Stoughton (1820–1885) |encyclopedia =Dictionary of Canadian Biography |volume=11 }}</ref> | |||
He was first educated by ] ]s at ]. At age 13 he came to the attention of ], the ] of St. Boniface, who was eagerly promoting the priesthood for talented young Métis. In ] Taché arranged for Riel to attend the ] of the ] in ], ] under the direction of the ]. Descriptions of him at this time indicate that he was a fine scholar of ]s, ], and ], but exhibited a frequent and unpredictable moodiness. | |||
In late August, Riel denounced the survey in a speech, and on 11 October 1869, the survey's work was disrupted by a group of Métis that included Riel.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> This group organized itself as the "]" on 16 October, with Riel as secretary and ] as president.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://indigenouspeoplesatlasofcanada.ca/article/red-river-resistance/|title=Red River Resistance|work=Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada|accessdate=6 April 2021}}</ref> When summoned by the HBC-controlled ] to explain his actions, Riel declared that any attempt by Canada to assume authority would be contested unless Ottawa had first negotiated terms with the Métis. Nevertheless, the non-bilingual McDougall was appointed the ]-designate, and attempted to enter the settlement on 2 November. McDougall's party was turned back near the Canada–US border, and on the same day, Métis led by Riel seized ].<ref>{{Cite news |year=2001| publisher= CBC | work =From Sea to Sea |title= Louis Riel| url =https://www.cbc.ca/history/EPCONTENTSE1EP9CH2LE.html|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news | publisher= CBC |year=2001| work =From Sea to Sea |title= The Execution of Thomas Scott | url =https://www.cbc.ca/history/EPCONTENTSE1EP9CH2PA4LE.html|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref name=brodbeck/> | |||
Following news of his father's premature death in ], Riel lost interest in the priesthood and he withdrew from the college in March ]. For a time he continued his studies as a day student in the ] of the ], but was soon asked to leave following several breaches of discipline. For a period he remained in Montreal, living at the home of his aunt, Lucie Riel. Impoverished by the death of his father, Riel took employment as a law clerk in the Montreal office of ]. During this time he was involved in a failed romance with a young woman named Marie-Julie Guernon. This progressed to the point of Riel having signed a contract of ], but his fiancee's family opposed her involvement with a Métis, and the engagement was soon broken. Compounding this disappointment, Riel found legal work unpleasant, and perhaps as early as ] he had resolved to leave Quebec. He is believed to have worked odd jobs in ], ] while staying with poet ], and was then for a time employed as a clerk in ], ] prior to returning to the Red River on ], ]. | |||
HEY ROSS | |||
On 6 November, Riel invited Anglophones to attend a convention alongside Métis representatives to discuss a course of action, and on 1 December he proposed to this convention a list of rights to be demanded as a condition of union. Much of the settlement came to accept the Métis point of view, but a passionately pro-Canadian minority began organizing in opposition.<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref name=brodbeck/> Loosely constituted as the ], this group was led by ], ], Colonel John Stoughton Dennis, and a more reticent Major ].<ref>{{cite journal | last =Mitchell | first =Ross | journal =Manitoba Pageant | year=1960|volume= 5| issue=2 | title =John Christian Schultz, M.D. – 1840–1896 | url =http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/pageant/05/schultz_jc.shtml }}</ref> McDougall attempted to assert his authority by authorizing Dennis to raise a contingent of armed men, but the Anglophone settlers largely ignored this call to arms. Schultz, however, attracted approximately fifty recruits and fortified his home and store. Riel ordered Schultz's home surrounded, and the outnumbered Canadians soon surrendered and were imprisoned in ].<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
==Red River Rebellion== | |||
{{main|Red River Rebellion}} | |||
=== Background === | |||
The majority population of the Red River had historically been Métis and ] people. But upon his return, Riel found that religious, nationalistic, and racial tensions were being exacerbated by an influx of ] ] settlers from Ontario. The political situation was also uncertain, as ongoing negotiations for the transfer of Rupert's Land from the HBC to Canada had not addressed the political terms of transfer. Finally, despite warnings to the ] government from Bishop Taché and the HBC governor ] that any such activity would precipitate unrest, the Canadian minister of public works, ], ordered a survey of the area. The arrival on ], ] of a survey party headed by ] ] increased anxiety among the Métis, many of whom did not possess title to their land, which was in any case laid out according to the ] rather than in English-style square lots. | |||
===Provisional government=== | |||
=== Riel emerges as a leader === | |||
] | |||
Hearing of the unrest, Ottawa sent three emissaries to the Red River, including HBC representative ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | first=Alexander |last=Reford |year=1998 | title =Smith, Donald Alexander, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal | volume=14 |encyclopedia=Dictionary of Canadian Biography | url =http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/smith_donald_alexander_14E.html }}</ref> While they were en route, the Métis National Committee declared a provisional government on 8 December, with Riel becoming its president on 27 December.<ref name=rrr>{{cite encyclopedia |first1=J. M. |last1=Bumsted |first2=Richard |last2=Foot | encyclopedia =The Canadian Encyclopedia | title =Red River Rebellion | date=22 November 2019 | url =https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/red-river-rebellion}}</ref> | |||
In late August, Riel denounced the survey in a speech, and on ] ], the survey's work was disrupted by a group of Métis that included Riel. This group organised itself as the "Métis National Committee" on ], with Riel as secretary and ] as president. When summoned by the HBC-controlled ] to explain his actions, Riel declared that any attempt by Canada to assume authority would be contested unless Ottawa had first negotiated terms with the Métis. Nevertheless, the non-bilingual McDougall was appointed the ]-designate, and attempted to enter the settlement on ]. McDougall's party was turned back near the American border, and on the same day, Métis led by Riel seized ]. | |||
Meetings between Riel and the Ottawa delegation took place on 5 and 6 January 1870. When these proved fruitless, Smith chose to present his case in a public forum. After large meetings on 19 and 20 January, Riel suggested the formation of a new convention split evenly between Francophone and Anglophone settlers to consider Smith's proposals. On 7 February, a new list of rights was presented to the Ottawa delegation, and Smith and Riel agreed to send representatives to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiations on that basis.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> The provisional government established by Louis Riel published its own newspaper titled ''New Nation'' and established the ] to pass laws.<ref name="newnation">{{Cite news|title=Local Laws|newspaper=New Nation|date=15 April 1870|page=3|volume=1|issue=18}}</ref> The Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia was the first elected government at the Red River Settlement and functioned from 9 March to 24 June 1870. The assembly had 28 elected representatives, including a president, Louis Riel, an executive council (government cabinet), adjutant general (chief of military staff), chief justice and clerk.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Indigenous & Northern Relations|url=https://www.gov.mb.ca/inr/resources/the-legislative-assembly-of-assiniboia.html |title=Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref> | |||
On ], Riel invited anglophones to attend a convention alongside Métis representatives to discuss a course of action, and on ] he proposed to this convention a list of rights to be demanded as a condition of union. Much of the settlement came to accept the Métis point of view, but a passionately pro-Canadian minority began organising in opposition. Loosely constituted as the ], this group was led by ], ], Colonel Dennis, and a more reticent ] ]. McDougall attempted to assert his authority by authorizing Dennis to raise a contingent of armed men, but the anglophone settlers largely ignored this call to arms. Schultz, however, attracted some fifty recruits and fortified his house and store. Riel ordered Schultz's home surrounded, and the outnumbered Canadians soon surrendered and were imprisoned in ]. | |||
===Thomas Scott's execution=== | |||
=== Provisional government === | |||
Despite the progress on the political front, the Canadian party continued to plot against the provisional government. They attempted to recruit supporters to overthrow Riel. However, they suffered a setback on 17 February, when forty-eight men, including Boulton and ], were arrested near Fort Garry.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Hearing of the unrest, Ottawa sent three emissaries to the Red River, including HBC representative ]. While they were en route, the Métis National Committee declared a provisional government on ], with Riel becoming its president on ]. Meetings between Riel and the Ottawa delegation took place on ] and ], ], but when these proved fruitless, Smith chose to present his case in a public forum. Smith assured large audiences of the Government's goodwill in meetings on ] and ], leading Riel to propose the formation of a new convention split evenly between French and English settlers to consider Smith's instructions. On ], a new list of rights was presented to the Ottawa delegation, and Smith and Riel agreed to send representatives to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiations on that basis. | |||
Boulton was tried by a tribunal headed by ] and sentenced to death for his interference with the provisional government.<ref>{{harvnb|Salhany|2020|p=25}}</ref><ref name=Belanger-Scott>{{cite encyclopedia | last=Bélanger |first= Claude | publisher=Marianopolis College |encyclopedia=The Quebec History Encyclopedia | year =2007 |url =http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/QuebecHistory/readings/ThemurderofThomasScott.html |title=The 'Murder' of Thomas Scott}}</ref> He was pardoned, but Scott interpreted this as weakness by the Métis, who he regarded with open contempt.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> After Scott repeatedly quarreled with his guards, they insisted that he be tried for insubordination. At his court martial he was found guilty and was sentenced to death. Riel was repeatedly entreated to commute the sentence, but Riel responded, "I have done three good things since I have commenced: I have spared Boulton's life at your instance, I pardoned Gaddy, and now I shall shoot Scott."<ref>{{harvnb|Boulton|1985|page =51}}</ref> | |||
Scott was soon executed by a Métis firing squad on 4 March.<ref name="Bumsted 2000 p. 3">{{harvnb|Bumsted|2000|page=3}}</ref> Riel's motivations have been the cause of much speculation, but his justification was that he felt it necessary to demonstrate to the Canadians that the Métis must be taken seriously. Protestant Canada did take notice, swore revenge, and set up a "]" movement to mobilize their anger.<ref>{{harvnb|Anastakis|2015|page=27}}</ref><ref name=Dick/> Riel biographer ] noted that "as people then and later have said, it was Riel's one great political blunder".<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
=== Canadian resistance and the execution of Scott === | |||
Despite the apparent progress on the political front, the Canadian party continued to plot against the provisional government. However, they suffered a setback on ], when 48 men, including Boulton and ], were apprehended near Fort Garry. | |||
===Creation of Manitoba and the Wolseley expedition=== | |||
] | |||
The delegates representing the provisional government arrived in Ottawa in April. Although they initially met with legal difficulties arising from the execution of Scott, they soon entered into direct talks with Macdonald and ]. The parties agreed on several of the demands in the list of rights, including language, religious, and land rights (excepting ownership of public lands). This agreement formed the basis for the ], which formally admitted Manitoba into the Canadian confederation; the Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia unanimously supported joining. However, the negotiators could not secure a general ] for the provisional government; Cartier held that this was a question for the British government.<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref>{{cite journal|first=Thomas |last=Berger|title=The Manitoba Metis Decision and the Uses of History |url=https://www.canlii.org/en/commentary/doc/2014CanLIIDocs265|journal=Manitoba Law Journal |volume=38|issue= 1 |year=2015|pages=1–28 |doi=10.29173/mlj920 }}</ref> | |||
Boulton was tried by a tribunal headed by ] and sentenced to death for his interference with the provisional government. He was pardoned, but Scott interpreted this as weakness on the part of the Métis, whom he regarded with open contempt. After repeatedly quarrelling with his guards, they insisted that Scott be tried for ]. At his trial, he was found guilty of defying the authority of the provisional government and was sentenced to death. Riel was repeatedly entreated to commute the sentence, but Donald Smith reported that Riel responded to his pleas by saying: | |||
:''"I have done three good things since I have commenced: I have spared Boulton's life at your instance, I pardoned Gaddy, and now I shall shoot Scott."'' | |||
As a means of exercising Canadian authority in the settlement and dissuading ], a Canadian ] under Colonel ] was dispatched to the Red River. Although the government described it as an "errand of peace", Riel learned that ] elements in the expedition meant to ] him.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
Scott was ] on ]. Riel's motivations for allowing the execution have been the cause of much speculation, but his own justification was that he felt it necessary to demonstrate to the Canadians that the Métis must be taken seriously. | |||
==Intervening years== | |||
=== Creation of Manitoba and the Wolseley expedition === | |||
The delegates representing the provisional government departed for Ottawa in March. Although they initially met with legal difficulties arising from the execution of Scott, they were soon able to enter into direct talks with Macdonald and ]. An agreement enshrining many of the demands in the list of rights was quickly reached, and this formed the basis for the ] of ], ], which formally admitted ] into the ]. However, the negotiators were unable to secure a general ] for the provisional government. | |||
===Amnesty question=== | |||
As a means of exercising Canadian authority in the settlement and dissuading ], a Canadian ] under ] ] was dispatched to the Red River. Although the government described it as an ''"errand of peace"'', Riel learned that ] elements in the expedition meant to lynch him, and he fled as the expedition approached the Red River. The arrival of the expedition on ] marked the effective end of the ]. He took daniel and huged and kissed him till daniel died. | |||
It was not until 2 September 1870 that the new Lieutenant-governor ] arrived and set about the establishment of civil government.<ref>{{cite journal | last =Bowles | first =Richard S. | journal =MHS Transactions |volume=3 |issue=25 | title =Adams George Archibald, First Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba | year =1968 | url =http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/archibald_ag.shtml}}</ref> Without an amnesty, and with the Canadian militia threatening his life, Riel fled to the safety of the St. Joseph's mission across the Canada–US border in the ].<ref name="Huel-2003-117">{{harvnb |Huel | 2003 | page=117}}</ref> The results of the first provincial election in December 1870 were promising for Riel, as many of his supporters came to power. Nevertheless, stress and financial troubles precipitated a serious illness—perhaps a harbinger of his future mental afflictions—that prevented his return to Manitoba until May 1871.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
] | |||
The settlement now faced a possible threat, from cross-border ] coordinated by his former associate ].<ref name=swan>{{Cite journal |first1=Ruth |last1=Swan |first2=Edward A. |last2=Jerome |title='Unequal justice:' The Metis in O'Donoghue's Raid of 1871 |journal=Manitoba History |year=2000 |number=39 Spring / Summer |url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/39/unequaljustice.shtml }}</ref> Archibald issued a call to arms in October, and assured Riel that if he participated he would not be arrested. Riel organized several companies of Métis troops for the defense of Manitoba. When Archibald reviewed the troops in St. Boniface, he made the significant gesture of publicly shaking Riel's hand, signaling that a rapprochement had been effected.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/new-province-old-hatred-recriminations-after-the-resistance-571707372.html|newspaper=Winnipeg Free Press|last=Brodbeck|first=Tom|title=Métis stepped up for Crown, got stepped on for their trouble|date=10 July 2020}}</ref><ref name=swan/><ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
When this news reached Ontario, Mair and members of the Canada First movement whipped up anti-Riel (and anti-Archibald) sentiment. With Federal elections coming in 1872, Macdonald could ill afford further rift in Quebec–Ontario relations and so he did not offer an amnesty. Instead he quietly arranged for Taché to offer Riel a bribe of ]1,000 to remain in voluntary exile. This was supplemented by an additional ]600 from Smith for the care of Riel's family.<ref>{{harvnb|Gwyn|2011|pages=150–151}}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
==The intervening years== | |||
=== The amnesty question === | |||
It was not until ] that the new lieutenant-governor ] arrived and set about the establishment of civil government. In the absence of an amnesty, and with the Canadian militia beating and intimidating his sympathisers, Riel fled to the safety of the St. Joseph's mission across the border in the ]. However the results of the first provincial election in December ] were promising for Riel, as many of his supporters came to power. Nevertheless, stress and financial troubles precipitated a serious illness — perhaps a harbinger of his future mental afflictions — that prevented his return to Manitoba until May of ]. ]The settlement now faced another threat, this time from cross-border ] raids coordinated by his former associate ]. While the threat proved overstated, Archibald proclaimed a general call to arms on ]. Companies of armed horsemen were raised, including one led by Riel. When Archibald reviewed the troops in St. Boniface, he made the significant gesture of publicly shaking Riel's hand, signaling that a rapprochement had been effected. But this was not to be — when this news reached Ontario, Mair and members of the ] movement whipped up a significant resurgence of anti-Riel (and anti-Archibald) sentiment. With Federal elections coming in ], Macdonald could ill afford any further rift in Quebec-Ontario relations. He therefore quietly arranged for Taché to offer Riel what amounted to a bribe of ] to enter voluntary exile. This was supplemented by an additional ] from Smith for the care of Riel's family. With few other options, Riel accepted, arriving in ] on ] ]. However, by late June Riel was back in Manitoba and was soon thereafter convinced to run as a member of ] for the electoral district of ]. However, following the early September defeat of Cartier in his home riding in Quebec, Riel stood aside so that Cartier — on record as being in favour of amnesty for Riel — might secure a seat. Cartier won by acclamation, but Riel's hopes for a swift resolution to the amnesty question were dashed following Cartier's death on ], ]. In the ensuing by-election in October ], Riel ran unopposed, although he had once again fled, a warrant having been issued for his arrest in September. Lépine was not so lucky; he was captured and faced trial. Riel made his way to Montreal and, fearing arrest or ], vacillated as to whether he should attempt to take up his seat in the House of Commons — ], the ], had announced a bounty of $5000 for his arrest. Famously, Riel was the only ] who was not present for the great ] debate of ] that led to the resignation of the Macdonald government in November. ] leader ] became the interim ], and a general election was held in January ]. Although the Liberals under Mackenzie formed the new government, Riel easily retained his seat. Formally, Riel had to sign a register book at least once upon being elected, and he did so under disguise in late January. He was nevertheless stricken from the rolls following a motion supported by Schultz, who had become the member for the electoral district of ]. Undeterred, Riel prevailed once again in the resulting by-election, and although once again expelled, his symbolic point had been made and public opinion in Quebec was strongly tipped in his favour. | |||
Nevertheless, by late June Riel was back in Manitoba and was soon persuaded to run as a member of parliament for the electoral district of ]. However, following the early September defeat of George-Étienne Cartier in his home riding in Quebec, Riel stood aside so that Cartier—on record as being in favour of amnesty for Riel—might secure a seat in Provencher. Cartier won by acclamation, but Riel's hopes for a swift resolution to the amnesty question were dashed following Cartier's death on 20 May 1873. In the ensuing by-election in October 1873, Riel ran unopposed as an Independent, although he had again fled, a warrant having been issued for his arrest in September. Lépine was not so lucky; he was captured and faced trial.<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/theme_cartier.html?project_id=62&p=15|website=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|title=Relations with First Nations and Métis|accessdate=3 April 2021}}</ref> | |||
=== Exile and mental illness === | |||
During this period, Riel had been staying near ], ] in the French-Canadian village of Keesville. It was here that he received news of Lépine's fate: following his trial for the murder of Scott, which had begun on ] of 1874, Lépine was found guilty and sentenced to death. This sparked outrage in the sympathetic Quebec press, and calls for amnesty for both Lépine and Riel were renewed. This presented a severe political difficulty for Mackenzie, who was hopelessly caught between the demands of Quebec and Ontario. However, a solution was forthcoming when, acting on his own initiative, the ] ] commuted Lépine's sentence in January ]. This opened the door for Mackenzie to secure from parliament an amnesty for Riel, on that the condition that he remain in exile for five years. | |||
Riel made his way to Montreal and, fearing arrest or assassination, vacillated as to whether he should attempt to take up his seat in the ]—], the ], had announced a bounty of $5,000 for his arrest.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=Virtual Museum |url=http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/expositions-exhibitions/batoche/docs/proof_en_riel_bio.pdf |title=Louis Riel (1844–1885): Biography |accessdate=6 March 2021 |archive-date=31 March 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200331135925/http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/expositions-exhibitions/batoche/docs/proof_en_riel_bio.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/> Riel was the only Member of Parliament who was not present for the great ] debate of 1873 that led to the resignation of the Macdonald government in November. ] leader ] became the interim ], and a general election was held in January 1874. Although the Liberals under Mackenzie formed the new government, Riel easily retained his seat. Formally, Riel had to sign a register book at least once upon being elected, and he did so under disguise in late January. He was nevertheless stricken from the rolls following a motion supported by Schultz, who had become the member for the electoral district of ]. Riel prevailed again in the resulting by-election and was again expelled.<ref>{{cite web | last1 =Marleau | first1 =Robert | last2 =Montpetit | first2 =Camille | publisher = Parliament of Canada | work =House of Commons Procedure and Practice |title=The House of Commons and Its Members – Notes 351–373 | year =2000 | url =http://www.parl.gc.ca/MarleauMontpetit/DocumentViewer.aspx?Sec=Ch04&Seq=23&Lang=E }}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref>{{harvnb|Tolton|2011|p=19}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
During his time of exile, he was primarily concerned with religious rather than political matters. Spurred on by a sympathetic Roman Catholic priest in Quebec, he was increasingly influenced by his belief that he was a divinely chosen leader of the Métis. Modern ]s have speculated that he may have suffered from the ] condition ]. His mental state deteriorated, and following a violent outburst he was taken to Montreal, where he was for a period of some months under the care of his uncle, John Lee. But after Riel disrupted a religious service, Lee arranged to have him committed in an asylum in ] on ], ] under the assumed name "Louis R. David". Fearing discovery, his doctors soon transferred him to the Beauport Asylum near ] under the name "Louis Larochelle". While he suffered from sporadic irrational outbursts, he continued his religious writing, composing theological tracts with an admixture of Christian and Judaic ideas. He consequently began calling himself Louis "David" Riel, prophet of the new world, and he would pray (standing) for hours, having servants help him to hold his arms in the shape of a cross. Nevertheless, he slowly recovered, and was released from the asylum on ] ] with an admonition to lead a quiet life. He returned for a time to Keesville, where he became involved in a passionate romance with Evelina Martin ''dit'' Barnabé, sister of his friend, the ] father Fabien Barnabé. But with insufficient means to propose marriage, Riel returned to the west, hoping that she might follow. However, she decided that she would be unsuited to prairie life, and their correspondence soon ended. | |||
=== |
===Exile and mental illness=== | ||
During this period, Riel had been staying with the ] in ], ], who introduced him to parish priest Fabien Martin '']'' Barnabé in the nearby village of ]. It was here that he received news of Lépine's fate: following his trial for the murder of Scott, which had begun on 13 October 1874, Lépine was found guilty and sentenced to death. This sparked outrage in the sympathetic Quebec press, and calls for amnesty for both Lépine and Riel were renewed. This presented a severe political difficulty for Mackenzie, who was hopelessly caught between the demands of Quebec and Ontario. However, a solution was forthcoming when, acting on his own initiative, the ] ] commuted Lépine's sentence in January 1875. This opened the door for Mackenzie to secure from parliament an amnesty for Riel, on the condition that he remain in exile for five years.<ref name=Stanley-2013/><ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
In the fall of 1878, Riel returned to St. Paul, and briefly visited his friends and family. This was a time of rapid change for the Métis of the Red River — the ] on which they depended were becoming increasingly scarce, the influx of settlers was ever-increasing, and many had sold their land to unscrupulous land speculators. Like many other Red River Métis who had left Manitoba, Riel headed further west in order to start a new life. Travelling to the ], he became a trader and interpreter in the area surrounding ]. Observing rampant ] and its detrimental impact on the Native American and Métis people, he engaged in an unsuccessful attempt to curtail the ] trade.<!---some sources say he tried at this time to form an alliance of American and Canadian indians to resist white settlement, but not sure how reliable this is. See for instance: http://www.thehistorynet.com/we/blsittingbullandthemounties/index1.html----> In ], he married Marguerite Monet ''dit'' Bellehumeur (1861–1886), a young Métis, "in the fashion of the country" on ], an arrangement that was solemnized on ], ]. They were to have three children: Jean-Louis (1882–1908); Marie-Angélique (1883–1897); and a boy that was born and died on ], ], less than one month before Riel was hanged. | |||
During his time of exile, Riel was primarily concerned with religion rather than politics. Much of these emerging religious beliefs were based on a supportive letter dated 14 July 1875 that he received from Montreal's Bishop ]. His mental state deteriorated, and following a violent outburst he was taken to Montreal, where he was under the care of his uncle, John Lee, for a few months. But after Riel disrupted a religious service, Lee arranged to have him committed in an asylum in ] on 6 March 1876 under the assumed name "Louis R. David".<ref name=Stanley-2013/><ref name=Thomas-1982/> Fearing discovery, his doctors soon transferred him to the Beauport Asylum near ] under the name "Louis Larochelle".<ref name=cbc-rethinking-lr>{{Cite news | title =Rethinking Riel – Was Louis Riel Mentally Ill? |publisher= CBC |year=2006 | url =https://www.cbc.ca/archives/topic/rethinking-riel}}</ref> While he suffered from sporadic irrational outbursts, he continued his religious writing, composing theological tracts with an admixture of Christian and Judaic ideas.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> He consequently began calling himself "Louis David Riel, Prophet, Infallible Pontiff and Priest King".<ref name=littmann/> | |||
Riel soon became involved in the politics of Montana, and in 1882, actively campaigned on behalf of the ]. He went so far as to bring suit against a ] for allegedly rigging a vote, but was then himself accused of fraudulently inducing ]s to take part in the election. In response, Riel applied for ] ] and was ] on ], ]. With two young children, he had by ] settled down and was teaching school at the St. Peter's ] mission in the ] district of Montana. | |||
Nevertheless, he slowly recovered, and was released from the asylum on 23 January 1878 with an admonition to lead a quiet life. He returned for a time to Keeseville, where he became involved in a passionate romance with Evelina Martin ''dite'' Barnabé, sister of Father Fabien.<ref Name=Thomas-1982/> He asked her to marry him before moving west "with the avowed intention of establishing himself" before sending for her; however, their correspondence ended abruptly.<ref name=romantic>{{cite journal|last1=Campbell|first1=Glen|last2=Flanagan|first2=Tom|title=Louis Riel's romantic interests|journal=Manitoba History|issue=90|date=Fall 2019|pages=2–12}}</ref> | |||
== The North-West Rebellion == | |||
:''See main article: ].'' | |||
===Montana and family life=== | |||
=== Grievances in the Saskatchewan territory === | |||
] | |||
In the fall of 1878, Riel returned to St. Paul, and briefly visited his friends and family. This was a time of rapid change for the Métis of the Red River—the ] on which they depended were becoming increasingly scarce, the influx of settlers was ever-increasing, and much land was sold to unscrupulous land speculators. Like other Red River Métis who had left Manitoba, Riel headed further west to start a new life.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> Travelling to the ], he became a trader and interpreter in the area surrounding ]. Observing the detrimental impact of alcohol on the Métis, he engaged in an unsuccessful attempt to curtail the ] trade.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
In Pointe-au-Loup, ], ] in 1881,<ref>{{Cite web |year=2020 |url=https://shsb.mb.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Louis_Riel_arbre_genealogique.pdf |title=L'arbre généalogique de Louis Riel |publisher=Société historique de Saint-Boniface / Centre du patrimoine}}</ref><ref>{{cite report |title=Riel Family: Home and Lifestyle at St-Vital, 1860–1910 |first=Diane |last=Payment |url=http://parkscanadahistory.com/series/mrs/379.pdf |year=1980 |publisher=Parks Canada, Historical Research Division, Prairie Region |id=Manuscript Report Number 379}} Map of Figure 10 points east of mouth of Rivière au Lait & Missouri River towards Ft. Berthold, Dakota Territory and/or Pointe au Loup.</ref> he married the young Métis Marguerite Monet ''dite'' Bellehumeur,<ref name=Thomas-1982/> according to the custom of the country (à la façon du pays), on 28 April, the marriage being solemnized on 9 March 1882.<ref name=shsba/> Evelina learned of this marriage from a newspaper and wrote a letter accusing Riel of "infamy".<ref name=mitchell/><ref name=romantic/> Marguerite and Louis were to have three children: Jean-Louis (1882–1908); Marie-Angélique (1883–1897); and a boy who was born and died on 21 October 1885, less than one month before Riel was hanged.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
Following the Red River Rebellion, large numbers of Métis travelled west and settled in the ], especially along the south branch of the river in the country surrounding the Saint-Laurent mission (near modern ]). But by the 1880s, it had become clear that westward migration was no panacea for the troubles of the Métis and the plains Indians. The rapid collapse of the buffalo herd was causing near starvation among the ] and ] ]. This was exacerbated by a reduction in government assistance in ], and by a general failure of Ottawa to live up to its treaty obligations. The Métis were likewise obliged to give up the hunt and take up agriculture — but this transition was accompanied by complex issues surrounding land claims similar to those that had previously arisen in Manitoba. Moreover, settlers from Europe and the eastern provinces were also moving into the Saskatchewan territories, and they too had complaints related to the administration of the territories. Virtually all parties therefore had grievances, and by ] English settlers, ] and Métis communities were holding meetings and petitioning a largely unresponsive government for redress. In the electoral district of ], a meeting of the south branch Métis was held in the village of ] on ], and thirty representatives voted to ask Riel to return and represent their cause. On ] a joint "Settler's Union" meeting was attended by both the Métis and English-speaking representatives from ], including ], an Ontario settler sympathetic to the Métis and known to them as Honoré Jackson, and ] of the Anglo-Métis. It was here resolved to send a delegation to ask Riel's assistance in presenting their grievances to the Canadian government. | |||
Riel soon became involved in the politics of Montana, and in 1882, actively campaigned on behalf of the ]. He brought a suit against a ] for rigging a vote, but was then himself accused of fraudulently inducing ]s to take part in the election. In response, Riel applied for United States citizenship and was ] on 16 March 1883.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Library and Archives Canada|url=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/confederation/023001-2390-e.html|title=Louis Riel (October 22, 1844 – November 16, 1885)|accessdate=6 March 2021|archive-date=4 May 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070504233246/http://www.collectionscanada.ca/confederation/023001-2390-e.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> With two young children, he had by 1884 settled down and was teaching school at the ] ] mission in the ] district of Montana.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
=== The return of Riel === | |||
==North-West Rebellion== | |||
The head of the delegation to Riel was ], a respected buffalo hunter and leader of the Saint-Laurent Métis who had known Riel in Manitoba. ] was the lone ] delegate. Riel was easily swayed to support their cause — which was perhaps not surprising in view of Riel's continuing conviction that he was the divinely selected leader of the Métis and the prophet of a new form of Christianity. Riel also intended to use any new position of influence to pursue his own land claims in Manitoba. In any case, the party departed ], and arrived back at Batoche on ]. Upon his arrival Métis and English settlers alike formed an initially favourable impression of Riel following a series of speeches in which he advocated moderation and a reasoned approach. During June 1884, the Plains Cree leaders ] and ] were independently formulating their complaints, and subsequently held meetings with Riel. However, the Indian's grievances were quite different from those of the settlers, and nothing was then resolved. Inspired by Riel, Honoré Jackson and representatives of other communities set about drafting a petition, and Jackson on ] released a manifesto detailing grievances and the settler's objectives. For several months a joint English-Métis central committee with Jackson acting as secretary worked to reconcile proposals from different communities. In the interim, Riel's support from some quarters began to waver. As Riel's religious pronouncements became increasingly removed from Roman Catholicism, the clergy began to distance themselves, and father ] cautioned Riel against mixing religion and politics. Also, in response to bribes by territorial ] and Indian commissioner ], local English-language newspapers adopted an editorial stance critical of Riel. Nevertheless, the work continued, and on ] Riel forwarded the committee's petition to the government, along with the suggestion that delegates be sent to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiation. Receipt of the petition was acknowledged by ], Macdonald's Secretary of State, although Macdonald himself would later deny having ever seen it. | |||
{{Main|North-West Rebellion}} | |||
] | |||
Following the Red River Resistance, Métis travelled west and settled in the ]. But by the 1880s, the rapid collapse of the buffalo herd was causing near starvation among the First Nations. This was exacerbated by a reduction in government assistance, and by a general failure of Ottawa to live up to its treaty obligations. The Métis were likewise obliged to give up the hunt and take up agriculture—but this transition was accompanied by complex issues surrounding land claims similar to those that had previously arisen in Manitoba. Moreover, settlers from Europe and the eastern provinces were also moving into the Saskatchewan territories, and they too had complaints related to the administration of the territories. Virtually all parties therefore had grievances, and by 1884 Anglophone settlers, ] and Métis communities were holding meetings and petitioning a largely unresponsive government for redress.<ref name=beal/><ref name=atlas>{{cite web|url=https://indigenouspeoplesatlasofcanada.ca/article/1885-northwest-resistance/|title=1885 Northwest Resistance|work=Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref> | |||
In the electoral district of ], a meeting of the south branch Métis was held in the village of ] on 24 March, and representatives voted to ask Riel to return and represent their cause. On 6 May a joint "Settler's Union" meeting was attended by both the Métis and English-speaking representatives from ], including ], an Ontario settler sympathetic to the Métis and known to them as Honoré Jackson, and ] of the Anglo-Métis.<ref>{{cite journal|last =Flanagan |first =Thomas |title =Louis Riel's Land Claims |journal=Manitoba History |year=1991 |volume=21 |issue= Spring |url =http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/21/riellandclaims.shtml }}</ref> It was here resolved to send a delegation to ask Riel to return.<ref name=atlas/> | |||
=== Break with the church === | |||
===Return of Riel=== | |||
While Riel awaited news from Ottawa he considered returning to Montana, but had by February resolved to stay. In the absence of a productive course of action, Riel began to engage in obsessive prayer, and was, in fact, experiencing a significant relapse of his mental agitations. This led to a deterioration in his relationship with the Catholic hierarchy, as he publicly espoused an increasingly ] doctrine. On ], ], a response to the petition was received. The government proposed to take a census of the North-West Territories, and to form a commission to investigate grievances. This angered the Métis, who interpreted this as a mere delaying tactic — a faction emerged that favoured taking up arms at once. This was not supported by the Church, the majority of the English-speaking community, or, indeed, by the Métis faction supporting local leader ]. But Riel, undoubtedly influenced by his messianic delusions, became increasingly supportive of this course of action. In the church at Saint-Laurent on ], Riel disrupted a sermon to argue for this position, following which he was barred from receiving the ]s, and increasingly frequently discussed his "divine revelations". But disenchanted with the status quo, and swayed by Riel's charisma and eloquent rhetoric, many Métis remained loyal to Riel, despite his proclamations that ] ] should be accepted as ], and that ''"Rome has fallen"''. A clergymen at Saint-Laurent later reported that, | |||
The head of the delegation to Riel was ], a respected buffalo hunter and leader of the Saint-Laurent Métis who had known Riel in Manitoba.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |first=Adam |last=Gaudry | encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia | title =Gabriel Dumont | date=9 September 2019 | url =http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/dumont-gabriel/}}</ref> James Isbister<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | first=David |last=Smyth |year=1998 | title = Isbister, James |encyclopedia=Dictionary of Canadian Biography | url = http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/isbister_james_14E.html | volume = 14 }}</ref> was the lone Anglo-Métis delegate. Riel was easily swayed to support their cause. Riel also intended to use the new position of influence to pursue his own land claims in Manitoba.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
Upon his arrival Métis and Anglophone settlers alike formed an initially favourable impression of Riel following a series of speeches in which he advocated moderation and a reasoned approach. During June 1884, the Plains Cree leaders ] and ] were independently formulating their complaints, and subsequently held meetings with Riel. However, the Native grievances were quite different from those of the settlers, and nothing was resolved.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
:''"...in his strange and alarming folly, fascinated our poor half-breeds as the snake is said to fascinate its victim"''. | |||
Honoré Jackson and representatives of other communities set about drafting a petition to be sent to Ottawa. In the interim, Riel's support began to waver. As Riel's religious pronouncements became increasingly heretical, the clergy distanced themselves, and father ] cautioned Riel against mixing religion and politics. In response to bribes by territorial ] and Indian commissioner ], local English-language newspapers adopted an editorial stance critical of Riel.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
=== Open rebellion === | |||
Nevertheless, Riel's campaign for better treatment continued, and on 16 December Riel forwarded the committee's petition to the government, along with the suggestion that delegates be sent to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiation. Receipt of the petition was acknowledged by ], Macdonald's Secretary of State, although Macdonald himself would later deny having ever seen it.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> By then many original followers had left; only 250 remained at Batoche when it fell in May 1885.<ref>{{harvnb|Miller|2004|page=}}</ref> | |||
On ] it became known that the ] garrison at Battleford was being reinforced. Although only 100 men had been sent in response to warnings from father ] and NWMP superintendent ], a rumour soon began to circulate that 500 heavily armed troops were advancing on the territory. Métis patience was exhausted, and Riel's followers seized arms, took hostages, and cut the telegraph lines between Batoche and Battleford. A provisional government was declared at Batoche on ], with Riel as the political and spiritual leader and with Dumont assuming responsibility for military affairs. Riel formed a council called the ] (a ] meaning "those who have left the flock"), and sent representatives to court Poundmaker and Big Bear.<!--accounts differ over when representatives sent.--> On ], Riel's emissaries demanded that Crozier surrender ], but this was refused. The situation was becoming critical, and on ] Dewdney sent a telegraph to Macdonald indicating that military intervention might be necessary. Scouting near Duck Lake on ], a force led by Gabriel Dumont unexpectedly chanced upon a party from Fort Carlton. In the ensuing ], the police were routed, and the Indians also rose up once the news became known. The die was cast for a violent outcome, and the ] was begun in earnest. | |||
While Riel awaited response from Ottawa he considered returning to Montana, but had by February resolved to stay. Without a productive course of action, Riel began to engage in obsessive prayer, and was experiencing a significant relapse of his mental agitations. He publicly espoused an increasingly ] doctrine, causing a deterioration in his relationship with the Catholic clergy.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
], 1885]] | |||
Riel had counted on the Canadian government being unable to effectively respond to another uprising in the distant ], thereby forcing them to accept political negotiation. This was essentially the same strategy that had worked to such great effect during the 1870 rebellion. But in that instance, the first troops did not arrive until three months after Riel seized control. However, Riel had completely overlooked the significance of the nascent ]. Despite major gaps in railway construction, the first Canadian regular and militia units, under the command of ] ], arrived in Duck Lake less than two weeks after Riel had made his demands. | |||
Knowing that he could not defeat the Canadians in direct confrontation, Dumont had hoped to force the Canadians to negotiate by engaging in a long-drawn out campaign of ]; Dumont realised a modest success along these lines at the ] on ]. Riel, however, insisted on concentrating forces at Batoche in order to defend his "city of God". The outcome of the ensuing ] which took place from ] – ] was never in doubt, and on ] a disheveled Riel surrendered to Canadian forces. Although ]'s forces managed to hold out until the ] on ], the rebellion was a dismal failure for Métis and Indian alike, with most surrendering or fleeing. | |||
On 11 February 1885, the Métis received a response to their petition. The government proposed to take a census of the North-West Territories, and to form a commission to investigate grievances. This angered a faction of the Métis who saw it as a mere delaying tactic; they favoured taking up arms at once. Riel became the leader of this faction, but he lost the support of almost all Anglophones and Anglo-Métis, and the Catholic Church.<ref name=shsba/> He also lost the support of the Métis faction supporting local leader ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |first=Diane P. |last=Payment |title =Nolin, Charles |volume=13 |url =http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/nolin_charles_13E.html |encyclopedia= Dictionary of Canadian Biography |year=1994 }}</ref> But Riel, undoubtedly influenced by his messianic delusions,<ref>{{Cite journal |last= Dumontet |first= Monique |year=1994 |title= Essay 16 Controversy in the Commemoration of Louis Riel |url=http://canadianpoetry.org/mnemographia_canadensis/volume2/essay_16.html |journal=Mnemographia Canadensis |volume=2 }}</ref> became increasingly supportive of this course of action. Disenchanted with the status quo, and swayed by Riel's charisma and eloquent rhetoric, hundreds of Métis remained loyal to Riel, despite his proclamations that Bishop Ignace Bourget should be accepted as pope, and that "Rome has fallen".<ref name=Thomas-1982/><ref name=cbc-rethinking-lr/> | |||
== Trial for treason == | |||
{{main|Trial of Louis Riel}} | |||
Several individuals closely tied to the government requested that the trial be held in Winnipeg in July of 1885. Although several historians contend that the trial was moved to Regina due to concerns with the possibility of an ethnically mixed and sympathetic jury, ] states that an amendment of the ] (which dropped the provision that trials with crimes punishable by death should be tried in Manitoba), meant that the trial could be convened within the North-West Territories and did not have to be held in Winnipeg. ] | |||
Prime minister Sir ] ordered the trial to be convened in Regina, where Riel was tried before a jury of six ] and ] Protestants, all from the area surrounding Regina. The trial began on ],], and lasted only five days. | |||
===Open rebellion=== | |||
Riel delivered two lengthy speeches during his trial, defending his own actions and affirming the rights of the Métis people. He rejected his lawyer's attempt to argue that he was ], asserting, | |||
The ] was declared at Batoche on 19 March. Riel was the political and spiritual leader and Dumont assumed responsibility for military affairs.<ref name=atlas/><ref name=falcon>{{cite journal|url=http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca/vol14/no4/PDF/CMJ144Ep54.pdf|last=Ouellette|first=Robert-Falcon|title=The Second Métis War of 1885: A Case Study of Non-Commissioned Member Training and the Intermediate Leadership Program|journal=Canadian Military Journal|volume=14|issue=4|date=Autumn 2014|pages=54–65}}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/> Riel formed a council called the ] (a ] meaning "those who picked from the flock").<ref name=Thomas-1982/> On 21 March, Riel's emissaries demanded that Crozier surrender ].<ref name=falcon/> Scouting near Duck Lake on 26 March, a force led by Gabriel Dumont unexpectedly chanced upon a party from Fort Carlton. In the ensuing ], the police were routed and the ] was begun in earnest.<ref name=falcon/><ref name=shsba/> | |||
The near-completion of the ] allowed troops from eastern Canada to quickly arrive in the territory.<ref name=oosterom>{{cite web|url=https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/first-nations-inuit-metis/shifting-riel-ity-the-1885-north-west-rebellion|website=Canada's History|title=Shifting Riel-ity: The 1885 North-West Rebellion|first1=Keith |last1=Foster|first2=Nelle|last2= Oosterom|date=13 February 2014}}</ref> Knowing that he could not defeat the Canadians in direct confrontation, Dumont had hoped to force the Canadians to negotiate by engaging in a sustained campaign of ]; Dumont realized a modest success along these lines at the ] on 24 April 1885.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Virtual Museum|url=http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/expositions-exhibitions/batoche/docs/proof_en_battle_of_fish_creek.pdf|title= The Battle of Fish Creek (April 23, 1885)|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref> | |||
:"''Life, without the dignity of an intelligent being, is not worth having.''" | |||
Riel, however, insisted on concentrating forces at Batoche to defend his "city of God".<ref name=Thomas-1982/> The outcome of the ensuing ] which took place from 9 to 12 May<ref name=beal>{{cite encyclopedia |first1=Bob |last1=Beal |first2=Rod |last2=MacLeod |first3=Richard |last3=Foot | title =North-West Rebellion | encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia | date=30 July 2019 | url =http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/north-west-rebellion }}</ref> was never in doubt, and on 15 May a disheveled Riel surrendered to Canadian forces.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> Although Big Bear's forces managed to hold out until the ] on 3 June,<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |first=Stewart |last=Mein |title=North-West Resistance |encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan |year=2006 |url=https://esask.uregina.ca/entry/north-west_resistance.jsp |archive-date=13 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210613020711/https://esask.uregina.ca/entry/north-west_resistance.jsp |url-status=dead }}</ref> the Rebellion was a dismal failure for Indigenous communities.<ref name=beal/> | |||
The jury found him guilty but recommended mercy; nonetheless, Judge ] sentenced him to death, with the date of his execution initially set for ], ]. Fifty years later one of the jurors, Edwin Brooks, said that Riel was tried for treason but hanged for the execution of Thomas Scott. | |||
==Trial== | |||
{{Main|Trial of Louis Riel}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Several individuals closely tied to the government requested that the trial be held in Winnipeg in July 1885. Some historians contend that the trial was moved to Regina because of concerns with the possibility of an ethnically mixed and sympathetic jury.<ref>{{harvnb|Basson|2008|page=66}}</ref> Prime Minister Macdonald ordered the trial to be convened in ], where Riel was tried before a jury of six Anglophone Protestants. The trial began on 20 July 1885.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
Riel delivered two long speeches during his trial, defending his own actions and affirming the rights of the Métis people. He rejected his lawyers' attempt to argue that he was ]. The jury found him guilty but recommended mercy; nonetheless, Judge ] sentenced him to death on 1 August 1885, with the date of his execution initially set for 18 September 1885.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> "We tried Riel for treason," one juror later said, "And he was hanged for the murder of Scott."<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|1979|page= 23}}</ref> Lewis Thomas notes that "the government's conduct of the case was to be a travesty of justice".<ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
The Jury said the following message before his trial in Regina: | |||
==Execution== | |||
:"''“You shall be taken now from here to the police guardroom at Regina jail… and on the 18th of September…be hanged by the neck till you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul.”''" | |||
Boulton writes in his memoirs that, as the date of his execution approached, Riel regretted his opposition to the defence of insanity and vainly attempted to provide evidence that he was not sane.<ref name=littmann>{{cite journal |first=S.K.|last=Littmann|year=1978|title=A Pathography of Louis Riel |url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/070674377802300706 |journal= Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal|volume= 23|issue=7|pages=449–462|doi=10.1177/070674377802300706|pmid=361196}}</ref><ref name=Boulton-1886-411>{{harvnb|Boulton|1886|loc=}}</ref> Requests for a retrial, petitions for a commuted sentence, and an appeal to the ] in Britain were denied.<ref name=Thomas-1982/> John A. Macdonald, who was instrumental in upholding Riel's sentence, is famously quoted as saying "He shall hang though every dog in Quebec bark in his favour" (although the veracity of this quote is uncertain).<ref>{{harvnb|Gwyn|2011|p=469}}</ref> | |||
Before his execution, Riel received Father André as his spiritual advisor. He was also given writing materials and allowed to correspond with friends and relatives.<ref>{{cite web|first=W.O.|last=Mitchell|date=15 February 1952|title=The Riddle of Louis Riel: Conclusion|work=Maclean's|url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1952/2/15/the-riddle-of-louis-riel|archive-date=20 September 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200920091923/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1952/2/15/the-riddle-of-louis-riel|url-status=dead}}</ref> Louis Riel was ] for treason on 16 November 1885 at the North-West Mounted Police barracks in Regina.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Library and Archives Canada|url=https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/politics-government/canadian-confederation/Pages/louis-riel.aspx |title=Louis Riel (October 22, 1844 – November 16, 1885)|accessdate=7 March 2021}}</ref> | |||
== Execution == | |||
Prior to his execution, Riel was reconciled with the Catholic church, and assigned Father André as his spiritual advisor. He was also given writing materials so that he could employ his time in prison to write a book. <!--I don't believe that was the intent - even his mail was read ----> Boulton writes in his memoirs that, as the date of his execution approached, Riel regretted his opposition to the defence of insanity and vainly attempted to provide evidence that he was not sane. After several requests for a retrial and an appeal to the ] in England were denied, Louis Riel was ] for treason on ], ]. | |||
] | ] | ||
Boulton writes of Riel's final moments |
Boulton writes of Riel's final moments: | ||
<blockquote> Père André, after explaining to Riel that the end was at hand, asked him if he was at peace with men. Riel answered ''"Yes."'' The next question was, "Do you forgive all your enemies?" "Yes." Riel then asked him if he might speak. Father André advised him not to do so. He then received the kiss of peace from both the priests, and Father André exclaimed in French, "{{lang|fr|Alors, allez au ciel!}}" meaning "So, go to heaven!"<ref>{{harvnb|Boulton|1886|loc=}}</ref> | |||
... last words were to say good-bye to Dr. Jukes and thank him for his kindness, and just before the white cap was pulled over his face he said, "{{lang|fr|Remerciez Madame Forget.}}" meaning "Thank Mrs. Forget".<ref name=Boulton-1886-414>{{harvnb|Boulton|1886|loc=}}</ref> | |||
The cap was pulled down, and while he was praying the trap was pulled. Death was not instantaneous. Louis Riel's pulse ceased four minutes after the trap-door fell and during that time the rope around his neck slowly strangled and choked him to death. The body was to have been interred inside the gallows' enclosure, and the grave was commenced, but an order came from the Lieutenant-Governor to hand the body over to Sheriff Chapleau which was accordingly done that night.<ref name=Boulton-1886-414/></blockquote> | |||
Following the execution, Riel's body was returned to his mother's home in ], where it lay in state. On 12 December 1886, his remains were interred in the churchyard of the ] following the celebration of a ].<ref name=shsba/> | |||
The prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, who was instrumental in upholding Riel's sentence, is famously quoted as saying | |||
The trial and execution of Riel caused a bitter and prolonged reaction which convulsed Canadian politics for decades. The execution was both supported and opposed by the provinces. For example, conservative Ontario strongly supported Riel's execution, but Quebec was vehemently opposed to it. Francophones were upset Riel was hanged because they thought his execution was a symbol of Anglophone dominance of Canada. The Orange Irish Protestant element in Ontario had demanded the execution as the punishment for Riel's treason and his execution of Thomas Scott in 1870. In Quebec, the politician ] rose to power by mobilizing the opposition in 1886.<ref name=Stanley-2013/><ref>{{harvnb|Stewart|2002|page=156}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1= Read |first1= Geoff |last2=Webb |first2= Todd | title='The Catholic Mahdi of the North West': Louis Riel and the Metis Resistance in Transatlantic and Imperial Context |journal= Canadian Historical Review |year=2012 |volume= 93 | issue=2 |pages= 171–195 |doi=10.3138/chr.93.2.171}}</ref> | |||
:"He shall hang though every dog in Quebec bark in his favour." | |||
==Historiography== | |||
Following the execution, Riel's body was returned to his mother's home in ], where it lay in state. On ], ], his remains were laid in the churchyard of the ] following the performance of a ]. | |||
] | |||
Historians have debated the Riel case so often and so passionately that he is the most written-about person in Canadian history.<ref>{{harvnb|Hamon|2019|p=14}}</ref> Interpretations have varied dramatically over time. The first amateur English language histories hailed the triumph of civilization, represented by English-speaking Protestants, over savagery represented by the half-breed Métis who were Catholic and spoke French. Riel was portrayed as an insane traitor and an obstacle to the expansion of Canada to the West.<ref>{{harvnb|Francis|Jones|Smith|2009|pages=306–307}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Sprague|1988|page= 1}}</ref> | |||
By the mid-20th century academic historians had dropped the theme of savagery versus civilization, deemphasized the Métis, and focused on Riel, presenting his execution as a major cause of the bitter division in Canada along ethnocultural and geographical lines of religion and language. ] says of the execution that it "convulsed the course of national politics for the next decade": it was well received in Ontario, particularly among ], but francophone Quebec defended Riel as "the symbol, indeed as a hero of his race".<ref>{{harvnb|Morton|1963|page=371}}</ref> Morton concluded that some of Riel's positions were defensible, but that "they did not present a program of practical substance which the government might have granted without betrayal of its responsibilities".<ref>{{harvnb|Morton|1963|page=369}}</ref> J. M. Bumsted in 2000 said that for Manitoba historian James Jackson, the shooting of Scott—"perhaps the result of Riel's incipient madness—was the great blemish on Riel's achievement, depriving him of his proper role as the father of Manitoba."<ref>{{harvnb|Bumsted|2000|page=17}}</ref> | |||
==Legacy== | |||
The Catholic clergy had originally supported the Métis, but reversed themselves when they realized that Riel was leading a heretical movement. They made sure that he was not honored as a martyr.<ref>{{harvnb|Perin|1990|page= 259}}</ref> However the clergy lost their influence during the ], and activists in Quebec found in Riel the perfect hero, with the image now of a freedom fighter who stood up for his people against an oppressive government in the face of widespread racist bigotry. He was made a folk hero by Métis, French Canadian and other Canadian minorities. Activists who espoused violence embraced his image; in the 1960s, the Quebec terrorist group, the ] adopted the name "Louis Riel" for one of its ]s.<ref>{{harvnb|Saywell|1973|page=94}}</ref> | |||
=== Political legacy === | |||
Across Canada there emerged a new interpretation of reality in his rebellion, holding that the Métis had major unresolved grievances; that the government was indeed unresponsive; that Riel had chosen violence only as a last resort; and he was given a questionable trial, then executed by a vengeful government.<ref name=Flanagan-2000-x>{{harvnb|Flanagan|2000|page=x}}</ref> John Foster said in 1985 that "the interpretive drift of the last half-century ... has witnessed increasingly shrill though frequently uncritical condemnations of Canadian government culpability and equally uncritical identification with the "victimization" of the "innocent" Métis".<ref>{{Cite journal |first=John E. |last=Foster |title=Review of Riel and the Rebellion 1885 Reconsidered By Thomas Flanagan |journal=Great Plains Quarterly |year=1985 |volume=5 |issue=4 |pages=259–260 |url=http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/1835 }}</ref> However, political scientist ] reversed his views after editing Riel's writings: he argued that "the Métis grievances were at least partly of their own making", that Riel's violent approach was unnecessary given the government's response to his initial "constitutional agitation", and "that he received a surprisingly fair trial".<ref name=Flanagan-2000-x/> | |||
The Saskatchewan Métis' requested land grants were all provided by the government by the end of ], and the government resurveyed the Métis river lots in accordance with their wishes. The Métis did not understand the long term value of their new land, however, and it was soon bought by speculators who later turned huge profits from it. In many respects, Riel's worst fears were realised — following the failed rebellion, the French language and Roman Catholic religion faced increasing marginalisation in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba, as exemplified by the controversy surrounding the ]. The Métis themselves were increasingly forced to live on undesirable land or in the shadow of ]s (as they did not themselves have treaty status). Saskatchewan did not attain provincehood until ]. | |||
An article by Doug Owram appearing in the ''Canadian Historical Review'' in 1982 found that Riel had become "a Canadian folk hero", even "mythical", in English Canada, corresponding with the designation of Batoche as a national historic site and the compilation of his writings.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Owram|first=Douglas|title=The Myth of Louis Riel|journal=The Canadian Historical Review|volume= 63 |issue= 3|year= 1982|pages= 315–336|doi=10.3138/CHR-063-03-01}}</ref> That compilation consisted of three volumes of letters, diaries, and other prose writings; a fourth volume of his poetry; and a fifth volume which contained reference materials.<ref>{{harvnb|Stanley|Huel|Martel|Flanagan|Campbell|1985}}</ref> Edited by ], Raymond Huel, Gilles Martel, Thomas Flanagan and Glen Campbell, this work "ma it possible to think comprehensively about Riel's life and his achievements", but was also criticized for some of its editorial decisions.<ref>{{harvnb|Hamon|2019|p=15}}</ref> In a 2010 speech, ], then ], summed up Riel as being a rebel by the standards of the time but a patriot "viewed through our modern lens".<ref>{{cite journal|title=Louis Riel: Patriot Rebel|last=McLachlin|first=Beverley|url=https://www.canlii.org/w/canlii/2011CanLIIDocs238.pdf|journal=Manitoba Law Journal|year=2011|volume=35|issue=1|pages=1–13}}</ref> | |||
Riel's execution and Macdonald's refusal to commute his sentence caused lasting upset in Quebec, and led to a fundamental alteration in the Canadian political order. In Quebec, ] exploited discontent over Riel's execution to reconstitute the ]. This party, which promoted ], won a majority in the ] by winning a number of seats formerly controlled by the ]. The ] likewise saw significant gains by the federal Liberals, again at the expense of the Conservatives. This led to the victory of the Liberal party under Sir ] in the ], which in turn set the stage for the domination of Canadian federal politics by the Liberal party in the ]. That Riel's name still has resonance in Canadian politics was evidenced on ], ], when ], a ] member of parliament, introduced private members' bill C-228, "An Act to revoke the conviction of Louis David Riel". The unsuccessful bill was widely perceived in English Canada as an attempt to arouse support for Quebec nationalism prior to the ] ] on ]. | |||
==Legacy== | |||
=== Riel reconsidered === | |||
The Saskatchewan Métis' requested land grants were all provided by the government by the end of 1887,<ref>{{harvnb|Flanagan|2000|p=82}}</ref> and the government resurveyed the Métis river lots in accordance with their wishes.<ref>{{harvnb|Flanagan|2000|p=60}}</ref> However, much of the land was soon bought by speculators who later turned huge profits from it.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/metis-scrip-in-canada|encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia|title=Métis Scrip in Canada|last=Robinson|first=Amanda|date=6 November 2018}}</ref> Riel's worst fears were realized—following the failed rebellion, the French language and Roman Catholic religion faced increasing marginalization in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba, as exemplified by the controversy surrounding the ].<ref>{{harvnb|Godbout|2020|pp=151–154}}</ref> The Métis themselves were increasingly forced to live in shantytowns on undesirable land.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://digital.scaa.sk.ca/ourlegacy/exhibit_aftermath|title=1885 – Aftermath|website=Our Legacy|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref> Saskatchewan did not become a province until 1905.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/saskatchewan-and-confederation|title=Saskatchewan and Confederation|encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia|last=Tattrie|first=Jon|date=3 February 2015}}</ref> | |||
Riel's execution and Macdonald's refusal to commute his sentence caused lasting discord in Quebec. Honoré Mercier exploited the discontent to reconstitute the ]. This party, which promoted ], won a majority in the ].<ref>{{harvnb|Godbout|2020|p=152}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/parti-national|title=Parti national|date=19 February 2014|encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia}}</ref> The ] likewise saw significant gains by the federal Liberals. This led to the victory of the Liberal party under ] in the ], which in turn set the stage for the domination of Canadian federal politics (particularly in Quebec) by the Liberal party in the 20th century.<ref>{{harvnb|Godbout|2020|p=153}}</ref><ref name=Thomas-1982/> | |||
The formerly widespread perception of Louis Riel as an insane traitor, especially outside of the Métis and ] community, weakened considerably since the late ]. Many now view Riel as a hero who stood up for his people in the face of a ] government, and some who question his sanity still view him as an essentially honourable figure. Riel nevertheless presents an enigma, although as historian ] has observed, it is possible that Riel was both a murderer and a hero. It is also possible that his rash decision to execute Scott drastically altered the history of his people. For example, shortly after the Red River Rebellion the Canadian government began a programme that speculators and other non-Métis exploited to dispossess the Métis of their land; had Scott not been executed, the government might well have supervised the program more rigorously, given the prior good relations between Canada and the Métis. Métis scholars have noted that Riel is a more important figure to non-Métis than to Métis, perhaps because he is often the only Métis figure most non-Métis are aware of. While it is by no means universally accepted, some scholars such as ] have pointed out certain parallels between Riel's following during the North-West Rebellion and ] ]s. Others have embraced his image as a revolutionary — in the ], the Quebec terrorist group, the ], went so far as to adopt the name "Louis Riel" for one of its ]s. | |||
Since the 1980s, numerous federal politicians have introduced ]s seeking to pardon Riel or recognize him as a ].{{sfn|Reid|2008|p=4}} In 1992, the House of Commons passed a resolution recognizing "the unique and historic role of Louis Riel as a founder of Manitoba and his contribution in the development of Confederation".<ref name=Flanagan-2000-179>{{harvnb|Flanagan|2000|page=179}}</ref>{{sfn|Reid|2008|p=4}} The CBC's '']'' project ranked Riel as the 11th "Greatest Canadian" on the basis of a public vote.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cbc.ca/archives/entry/and-the-greatest-canadian-of-all-time-is|publisher=CBC|title=And the Greatest Canadian of all time is...|accessdate=6 April 2021}}</ref> | |||
An act to revoke the convition of Louis Riel was introduced to the House of Commons, however the motion lacked unanimous consent from the House and was dropped.<ref></ref> | |||
On 19 February 2024, Riel was formally recognized as Manitoba's first premier by virtue of ''The Louis Riel Act''.<ref>{{cite news | last=Buffie | first=Nicole | date=19 February 2024 | title=Riel Formally Recognized as First Premier | url=https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/2024/02/19/riel-formally-recognized-as-first-premier | work=Winnipeg Free Press}}</ref> | |||
=== Monuments and place names === | |||
===Commemorations=== | |||
] | |||
{{multiple image | |||
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| image1 = Louis Riel statue at the Manitoba Legislative Grounds.jpg | |||
| caption1 = ] at the ] grounds in Winnipeg | |||
| image2 = LouisRielTortured.jpg | |||
| caption2 = "Tortured" Louis Riel statue at the ] | |||
}} | |||
In 2007, Manitoba's provincial government voted to recognize ] as a provincial holiday, observed on the third Monday of February.{{sfn|Reid|2008|p=5}}<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Government of Manitoba|url=https://www.gov.mb.ca/labour/standards/doc,gen-holidays-after-april-30-07,factsheet.html |title=Louis Riel Day holiday (3rd Mon. in Feb.)|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref> | |||
Two statues of Riel are located in Winnipeg. One of these statues, the work of architect ] and sculptor ], depicts Riel as a naked and tortured figure. It was unveiled in 1971 and stood in the grounds of the ] for 23 years. After much outcry (especially from the Métis community) that the statue was an undignified misrepresentation, the statue was removed and placed at the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.winnipegarchitecture.ca/louis-riel-statue/|title=Louis Riel Statue|publisher=Winnipeg Architecture Foundation|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref><ref name=bower>{{cite journal |last = Bower |first =Shannon |title ="Practical Results": The Riel Statue Controversy at the Manitoba Legislative Building | journal=Manitoba History |volume=42 |issue=Autumn / Winter 2001–2002 |year=2001 |url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/42/rielstatue.shtml }}</ref> It was replaced with a ] designed by ] depicting Riel as a dignified statesman. The unveiling ceremony was on 12 May 1996, in Winnipeg.<ref name="proceeedings">{{cite book|year=1996| title=Hansard Debates for Friday, November 22, 1996 | chapter=Private Members' Business regarding An Act to Revoke the Conviction of Louis David Riel – Bill C297| publisher =House Publications Parliament of Canada | chapter-url =https://www.ourcommons.ca/DocumentViewer/en/35-2/house/sitting-105/hansard#105PB1E.html }}</ref><ref name=bower/> A statue of Riel on the grounds of the ] in Regina was installed and later removed for similar reasons.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Beatty |first=Greg |title=Kim Morgan: Antsee|journal= Espace Sculpture |date=Winter 2003–2004 |issue=66 |page=42 |url=https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/espace/2003-n66-espace1049207/9041ac.pdf}}</ref> | |||
In numerous communities across Canada, Riel is commemorated in the names of streets, schools, neighbourhoods, and other buildings. Examples in Winnipeg include the landmark ] pedestrian bridge linking old Saint-Boniface with ],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://corridorcanada.ca/resource/pont-esplanade-louis-riel-a-winnipeg/?lang=en|website=Le Corridor|title=Winnipeg's Esplanade Riel: A magnificent bridge connecting people and cultures|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref> and the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrsd.net/News/Pages/Our-history---a-look-back.aspx|publisher=Louis Riel School Division|title=Our history: a look back|date=18 August 2014|archivedate=15 December 2021|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20211215083628/https://www.lrsd.net/News/Pages/Our-history---a-look-back.aspx|url-status=dead}}</ref> The student centre at the ] in Saskatoon is named after Riel, as is the ].<ref>{{cite web|publisher=University of Saskatchewan|url=http://scaa.usask.ca/gallery/uofs_events/articles/1980.php |title=Place Riel opens|accessdate=4 April 2021}}</ref> There are schools named after Louis Riel in four major Canadian cities: ], ], ] and Winnipeg.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://school.cbe.ab.ca/school/louisriel/Pages/default.aspx|title=Louis Riel School|publisher=Calgary Board of Education|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://louis-riel.cssdm.gouv.qc.ca/|title=École secondaire Louis-Riel|publisher=Ministère de l'Éducation et de l'Enseignement supérieur|accessdate=21 May 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = École secondaire publique Louis-Riel | url = http://www.louis-riel.cepeo.on.ca/ |publisher=Conseil des écoles publiques de l'Est de l'Ontario|accessdate=6 March 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://clr.dsfm.mb.ca/notre-histoire/|accessdate=24 June 2021|publisher=Division scolaire franco-manitobaine|title=Notre histoire|archive-date=24 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210624233451/https://clr.dsfm.mb.ca/notre-histoire/|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
], ].]] | |||
Portrayals of Riel's role in the Red River Resistance include the 1979 ] television film ''Riel''<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/01/threeviewsofriel.shtml|journal=Manitoba History|issue=1|year=1981|last1=Walz|first1=Eugene|last2=Payment|first2=Diane|last3=Laroque|first3=Emma|title=Review: Three Views of Riel}}</ref> and Canadian ] ]'s acclaimed 2003 ] '']''.<ref>{{harvnb|Bell|2006|p=166}}</ref> An opera about Riel entitled '']'' was commissioned for ] celebrations in 1967; it was written by ], with an English and French ] by ] and ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/louis-riel-emc|title=Louis Riel (opera)|encyclopedia=The Canadian Encyclopedia|last1=King|first1=Betty|last2=Winters|first2=Kenneth|date=20 April 2017}}</ref> | |||
In numerous communities in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and even in Ontario, Riel is commemorated in the names of streets, schools, and other buildings (such as the Louis Riel School Division in Winnipeg). The student centre and campus pub at the ] in Saskatoon are named after Riel. ], stretching from Regina to just south of Prince Albert, has been named ''Louis Riel Trail'' by the province; the roadway passes near many of the locations of the ] rebellion. One of the student residences at ] in Burnaby, British Columbia is named Louis Riel House. | |||
==See also== | |||
===Arts, literature, and popular culture === | |||
{{Portal|Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Canada|Biographies}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Footnotes== | |||
Portrayals of Riel's role in the Red River Rebellion include the ] ] ] ''Riel'' and Canadian ] ]'s acclaimed ] ] '']''. | |||
{{Reflist|20em}} | |||
An ] about Riel entitled ''Louis Riel'' was commissioned for ] celebrations in 1967. It was an opera in three acts, written by ], with an English and French ] by ] and ]. The ] produced and performed the first run of the opera in September and October, ]. | |||
From the late ] until the early ], the city of ] hosted "Louis Riel Day", a summer celebration that included a relay race that combined running, backpack carrying, ], hill climbing, and ] along the ] in the city's downtown core. Traditionally, the event also included a ] eating contest and ] competition, as well as live musical performances. Although not affiliated with the Saskatoon Exhibition, for many years Louis Riel Day was scheduled for the day prior to the start of the fair, and as such came to be considered the Exhibition's unofficial kick-off (the scheduling of the two events was separated in later years). The event was discontinued when major sponsors pulled out. | |||
In the 1970s TV series '']'', Zeb Macahan once goes to ] and meets Louis Riel (in the episode ''L'affaire Riel''). | |||
In ] a Canadian ] adopted the name ], the name given by Riel to his council in ]. | |||
] wrote a song entitled "Louis Riel", which has been performed by ], ] and ]. | |||
On ], ], ] and its French-language equivalent, ], staged a simulated retrial of Riel. Viewers were invited to vote "guilty" or "not guilty" over the internet, and over 10,000 votes were received — 87% of these were "not guilty". The results of this straw poll led to renewed calls for Riel's posthumous pardon. Similarly, the ]'s ] project ranked Riel as the 11th "Greatest Canadian" on the basis of a public poll. | |||
==Poem== | |||
On November 16, 2006, the CBC Radio program "]" on a lost poem written by Louis Riel very shortly before his death. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
<div class="references-small"><references/> | |||
* {{cite book|first=Dimitry |last=Anastakis|title=Death in the Peaceable Kingdom: Canadian History since 1867 through Murder, Execution, Assassination, and Suicide|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YpsjCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA27|year=2015|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-1442606364}} | |||
*] (1886) ''Reminiscences of the North-West Rebellions''. Toronto. . A first person account of the rebellions. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Basson|first=Lauren L.|title=White enough to be American?|year=2008|publisher=University of North Carolina Press|isbn=978-0-8078-5837-0}} | |||
*{{cite book | title = Louis Riel: A Comic-strip Biography| author = ] | year = 2003 | publisher = ], Montreal | id = ISBN 1-896597-63-7}} A biography of Riel in the form of a graphic novel. | |||
* {{cite book |last = Bell |first = John |author-link = John Bell (historian) |title = Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe |publisher = ] |year = 2006 |isbn = 978-1-55002-659-7 |url = https://archive.org/details/invadersfromnort0000bell}} | |||
*{{cite book | title = Canada: A story of challenge| author = ] | year = 1991 | publisher = Stoddart | id = ISBN 0-7736-7354-7}} A survey of Canadian history. | |||
* {{Cite book |first=Charles Arkoll |last=Boulton |year=1886 |title=Reminiscences of the North-West Rebellions|url=http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/1347.html |publisher=Grip Printing & Publishing Co }} | |||
* {{cite book | title = Riel and the Rebellion | author = ] | year = 1983 | publisher = Western Producer Prairie Books, Saskatoon | id = ISBN 0-88833-108-8}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Boulton |first=Charles Arkoll |editor-last=Robertson |editor-first=Heather | title =I Fought Riel | publisher =James Lorimer & Company | year =1985 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zdE5PVWEarEC | isbn = 0-88862-935-4 }} | |||
*{{cite book | title = Louis Riel| author = Flanagan, Thomas | year = 1992 | publisher = ], Ottawa | id = ISBN 0-88798-180-1}} A short work highlighting the complexity of Riel's character, and its many interpretations. | |||
*{{ |
* {{Cite book |last=Bumsted |first= J. M. |title=The Peoples of Canada: A Post-Confederation History |year=1992 |publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=0-19-540914-0}} | ||
* {{cite book|first=J. M. |last=Bumsted |title=Thomas Scott's Body: And Other Essays on Early Manitoba History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dGPa9ywV9ZIC&pg=PA17|year=2000|publisher=University of Manitoba Press |isbn=978-0887553875 }} | |||
*{{cite book | title = The Trial of Louis Riel, Justice and Mercy Denied| author = Goulet, George | year = 2005 | publisher = ], Calgary | id = ISBN 1-894638-70-0}} A critical legal and political analysis of Riel's 1885 high treason trial. | |||
*{{ |
* {{Cite book | last=Flanagan |first=Thomas |title=Riel and the Rebellion: 1885 Reconsidered |edition=2nd |publisher=University of Toronto Press |isbn = 0802082823 |year=2000 }} | ||
* {{cite book|editor1-first=R. Douglas |editor1-last=Francis |editor2-first=Richard |editor2-last=Jones|editor3-first=Donald B. |editor3-last=Smith|title=Journeys: A History of Canada|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GbbZRIOKclsC&pg=PA306|year=2009|publisher=Cengage Learning |isbn=978-0176442446 }} | |||
*{{cite book | title = Riel: a life of revolution| author = ] | year = 1994 | publisher = ], Toronto | id = ISBN 0-00-215792-6}} A sympathetic reevaluation of Riel drawing heavily on his own writings. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Godbout|first= Jean-François|title= Lost on Division: Party Unity in the Canadian Parliament|publisher= University of Toronto Press|year= 2020|isbn=978-1487535421}} | |||
*{{cite book | title = Louis Riel| author = ] | year = 1963 | publisher = ], Toronto | id = ISBN 0-07-092961-0}} The standard Riel biography, covering most of the material in this article. | |||
* {{Cite book |first=Richard J. |last=Gwyn |title=Nation Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times |year=2011 |volume=2 |series=Life and Times of Sir John A. Macdonald Series |publisher=Random House Canada |isbn=978-0307356444}} | |||
</div> | |||
* {{cite book|last=Hamon|first=Max|year=2019|title=The Audacity of His Enterprise: Louis Riel and the Métis Nation That Canada Never Was, 1840–1875|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|isbn=978-0773559370}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Huel | first=R.J.A. | title=Archbishop A.-A. Taché of St. Boniface: The "Good Fight" and the Illusive Vision | publisher=University of Alberta Press | series=Missionary Oblates Mary Immaculate | year=2003 | isbn=978-0-88864-406-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N8WJM9-kexMC&pg=PA117}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* {{cite book|first=James Rodger |last=Miller|title=Reflections on Native-newcomer Relations: Selected Essays |url=https://archive.org/details/reflectionsonnat0000mill|url-access=registration|year=2004 |edition=2nd |publisher=University of Toronto Press |isbn=0-8020-8669-1}} | |||
{{wikisource author}} | |||
* {{cite book|first=William Lewis |last=Morton |author-link=W. L. Morton |title=The Kingdom of Canada: A General History from Earliest Times |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4z0XAAAAIAAJ|year=1963 |publisher=McClelland and Stewart }} | |||
{{Commons|Louis Riel}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Reid |first=Jennifer |author-link=Jennifer Reid| date=2008 | title=Louis Riel and the Creation of Modern Canada: Mythic Discourse and the Postcolonial State | publisher=University of Manitoba Press | isbn=978-0-8263-4415-1 | oclc=1037748071 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hgJwXcKKK4oC}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Cite book |first=Roberto |last=Perin |title=Rome in Canada: The Vatican and Canadian Affairs in the Late Victorian Age |year=1990 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |jstor=10.3138/j.ctt2tv08x |isbn=978-0802067623 }} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book|last=Salhany|first=Roger|year=2020|title=A Rush to Judgment: The Unfair Trial of Louis Riel|publisher=Dundurn|isbn=978-1459746107}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Cite book |editor-first=John T. |editor-last=Saywell |title=Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs: 1971|year=1973 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |doi=10.3138/9781442671850 |isbn=978-1442671850}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Sprague| first= D.N. |title=Canada and the Métis, 1869–1885 |year=1988 |publisher=Wilfrid Laurier University Press |isbn= 0-88920-958-8}} | |||
* (PDF) | |||
* {{Cite book | title = Louis Riel| first= George |last=Stanley | year = 1963 | publisher = McGraw-Hill Ryerson | isbn = 0-07-092961-0 }} | |||
* | |||
* {{Cite book |origyear = 1964|last=Stanley |first=George F.G. |title=Louis Riel: Patriot or Rebel? |publisher=Canadian Historical Association |series=The Canadian Historical Association Booklets, 2 |year=1979 |url= https://cha-shc.ca/_uploads/5c38a89b5640d.pdf |edition=8th |isbn =0-88798-003-1 }} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Stanley |editor1-first=George |editor2-last=Huel |editor2-first=Raymond |editor3-last=Martel |editor3-first=Gilles |editor4-last=Flanagan |editor4-first=Thomas |editor5-last=Campbell |editor5-first=Glen |year= 1985 |title=The Collected Writings of Louis Riel/Les Ecrits Complets de Louis Riel|publisher= University of Alberta Press|isbn=0-88864-091-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ntkFn3f3OC8C&dq=Evelina+Martin+dite+Barnab%C3%A9&pg=RA1-PA264}} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book|first=Roderick |last=Stewart|title=Wilfrid Laurier|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=plolT8d2TWYC&pg=PA156|year=2002|publisher=Dundurn|isbn=978-1770707559}} | |||
* {{cite book|title=Cowboy Cavalry: The Story of the Rocky Mountain Rangers|first=Gordon Errett |last=Tolton|publisher=Heritage House Publishing|year=2011|isbn=978-1926936024}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
{{featured article}} | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1= Barkwell |first1=Lawrence J. | first2= Leah |last2=Dorion |first3=Darren |last3=Prefontaine |title= Metis Legacy: A Historiography and Annotated Bibliography |publisher= Pemmican Publications Inc. / Gabriel Dumont Institute |year= 2001 |isbn= 1-894717-03-1 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last= Braz |first= Albert |title=The False Traitor: Louis Riel in Canadian Culture |publisher=University of Toronto Press |year= 2003|ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book | title = Louis 'David' Riel: prophet of the new world | author = Flanagan, Thomas | year = 1979 | publisher = University of Toronto Press | isbn = 0-88780-118-8 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/louisdavidrielpr0000flan_z1t9 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book| title = Riel and the Rebellion | first= Thomas |last=Flanagan | year = 1983 | publisher = Western Producer Prairie Books | isbn = 0-88833-108-8 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book | title = Louis Riel | last= Flanagan |first=Thomas | year = 1992 | publisher = Canadian Historical Association | isbn = 0-88798-180-1 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/louisriel0000flan |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last= Hansen |first= Hans |title=Riel's Defence: Perspectives on His Speeches | year=2014 |publisher = McGill-Queen's University Press |edition=1st |isbn=978-0773543362 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book| title = Strange Empire: A Narrative of the Northwest (Louis Riel and the Metis People) | first =Howard Joseph |last=Kinsey | year = 1952 | publisher = William Morrow & Co | isbn = 0-87351-298-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0873512987 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last= Knox |first= Olive |title=The Question of Louis Riel's Insanity |journal=MHS Transactions | volume=3 | issue=6 |date= 1949–1950 |url=http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/rielinsanity.shtml |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite book | title = Riel: a life of revolution| first = Maggie |last=Siggins | year = 1994 | publisher = HarperCollins | isbn = 0-00-215792-6 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Stanley |first= G. F. G. |year=1964 |title=Louis Riel |journal=Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française |volume= 18 |issue=1 |pages=14–26 |doi= 10.7202/302338ar |doi-access=free |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last= Woodcock |first= George |title=Louis Riel: Defender of the Past |journal=History Today |date=Mar 1959 |volume= 9 |issue=3 |pages= 198–207 |ref=none}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:18, 30 December 2024
Métis leader in Canada (1844–1885) This article is about the Métis leader in Canada. For other uses, see Louis Riel (disambiguation).
Louis Riel | |
---|---|
President of the Provisional Government, then, Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia | |
In office 27 December 1869 – 24 June 1870 | |
Member of Parliament for Provencher | |
In office 13 October 1873 – 16 April 1874 | |
Preceded by | George-Étienne Cartier |
In office 13 September 1874 – 25 February 1875 | |
Succeeded by | Andrew Bannatyne |
Personal details | |
Born | (1844-10-22)22 October 1844 St. Boniface, Red River Colony, Rupert's Land |
Died | 16 November 1885(1885-11-16) (aged 41) Regina, North-West Territories, Canada |
Resting place | St. Boniface Cathedral |
Spouse |
Marguerite Monet dite Bellehumeur
(m. 1881) |
Children | 2 |
Signature | |
Louis Riel (/ˈluːi riˈɛl/; French: [lwi ʁjɛl]; 22 October 1844 – 16 November 1885) was a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of Manitoba, and a political leader of the Métis people. He led two resistance movements against the Government of Canada and its first prime minister John A. Macdonald. Riel sought to defend Métis rights and identity as the Northwest Territories came progressively under the Canadian sphere of influence.
The first resistance movement led by Riel was the Red River Resistance of 1869–1870. The provisional government established by Riel ultimately negotiated the terms under which the new province of Manitoba entered the Canadian Confederation. However, while carrying out the resistance, Riel had a Canadian nationalist, Thomas Scott, executed. Riel soon fled to the United States to escape prosecution. He was elected three times as member of the House of Commons, but, fearing for his life, never took his seat. During these years in exile he came to believe that he was a divinely chosen leader and prophet. He married in 1881 while in exile in the Montana Territory.
In 1884 Riel was called upon by the Métis leaders in Saskatchewan to help resolve longstanding grievances with the Canadian government. He returned to Canada and led an armed conflict with government forces: the North-West Rebellion of 1885. Defeated at the Battle of Batoche, Riel was imprisoned in Regina where he was convicted at trial of high treason. Despite protests, popular appeals and the jury's call for clemency, Riel was executed by hanging. Riel was seen as a heroic victim by French Canadians; his execution had a lasting negative impact on Canada, polarizing the new nation along ethno-religious lines. The Métis were marginalized in the Prairie provinces by the increasingly English-dominated majority. A long-term effect of these actions was the bitter alienation felt by Francophones across Canada, and their anger against the repression by their countrymen.
Riel's historical reputation has long been polarized between portrayals as a dangerous religious fanatic and rebel opposed to the Canadian nation, and, by contrast, as a charismatic leader intent on defending his Métis people from the unfair encroachments by the federal government eager to give Orangemen-dominated Ontario settlers priority access to land. Riel has received among the most formal organizational and academic scrutiny of any figure in Canadian history.
Early life
The Red River Settlement was a Rupert's Land territory administered by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). At the mid-19th-century the settlement was largely inhabited by Métis people of mixed First Nations-European descent. Their ancestors were for the most part Scottish and English men married to Cree women, and French-Canadian men married to Saulteaux (plains Ojibwe) women.
Louis Riel was born in 1844 in his grandparents' small one-room home in St-Boniface near the fork of the Red and Seine rivers. Riel was the eldest of eleven children in a locally well-respected family. His father, who was of Franco-Chipewyan Métis descent, had gained prominence in this community by organizing a group that supported Guillaume Sayer, a Métis arrested and tried for challenging the HBC's historical trade monopoly. Sayer's eventual release due to agitations by Louis Sr.'s group effectively ended the monopoly, and the name Riel was therefore well known in the Red River area. His mother was the daughter of Jean-Baptiste Lagimodière and Marie-Anne Gaboury, one of the earliest White families to settle in Red River in 1812. The Riels were noted for their devout Catholicism and strong family ties.
Riel began his schooling at age seven, and by age ten he attended St. Boniface Catholic schools, including eventually a school run by the French Christian Brothers. At age thirteen he came to the attention of Bishop Alexandre Taché, who was eagerly promoting the priesthood for talented young Métis. In 1858 Taché arranged for Riel to attend the Petit Séminaire de Montréal. Descriptions of him at the time indicate that he was a fine scholar of languages, science, and philosophy. While a good student, he was also hot-tempered, extreme in his views, intolerant of criticism and opposition, and not opposed to arguing with his teachers.
Following news of his father's premature death in 1864, Riel lost interest in the priesthood and withdrew from the college in March 1865. For a time, he continued his studies as a day student in the convent of the Grey Nuns, but was soon asked to leave, following breaches of discipline. During Riel's period of mourning of his father, he believed that Louis Riel was dead and he himself was David Mordecai, a Jew from Marseilles, and as David, he was not eligible to the immense inheritance of his father (which, in fact, was of little value). Seized with religious fervour, he announced that he was going to form a new religious movement. He remained in Montreal for over a year, living at the home of his aunt, Lucie Riel. Impoverished by the death of his father, Riel took employment as a law clerk in the Montreal office of Rodolphe Laflamme. During this time he was involved in a failed romance with a young woman named Marie–Julie Guernon. This progressed to the point of Riel having signed a contract of marriage, but his fiancée's family opposed her involvement with a Métis, and the engagement was soon broken. Compounding this disappointment, Riel found legal work unpleasant and, by early 1866, he had resolved to leave Canada East. Some of his friends said later that he worked odd jobs in Chicago, while staying with poet Louis-Honoré Fréchette, and wrote poems himself in the manner of Lamartine, and that he was briefly employed as a clerk in Saint Paul, Minnesota, before returning to the Red River settlement on 26 July 1868.
Red River Resistance
Main article: Red River RebellionThe majority population of the Red River had historically been Métis and First Nations people. Upon his return, Riel found that religious, nationalistic, and racial tensions were exacerbated by an influx of Anglophone Protestant settlers from Ontario. The political situation was also uncertain, as ongoing negotiations for the transfer of Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company to Canada had not addressed the political terms of transfer. Bishop Taché and the HBC governor William Mactavish both warned the Macdonald government that the lack of consultation and consideration of Métis views would precipitate unrest. Finally, the Canadian minister of public works, William McDougall, ordered a survey of the area. The arrival of a survey party on 20 August 1869 increased anxiety among the Métis as the survey was being carried out as a grid system of townships (an American system) that cut across existing Métis river lots.
In late August, Riel denounced the survey in a speech, and on 11 October 1869, the survey's work was disrupted by a group of Métis that included Riel. This group organized itself as the "National Committee of the Métis" on 16 October, with Riel as secretary and John Bruce as president. When summoned by the HBC-controlled Council of Assiniboia to explain his actions, Riel declared that any attempt by Canada to assume authority would be contested unless Ottawa had first negotiated terms with the Métis. Nevertheless, the non-bilingual McDougall was appointed the lieutenant governor-designate, and attempted to enter the settlement on 2 November. McDougall's party was turned back near the Canada–US border, and on the same day, Métis led by Riel seized Fort Garry.
On 6 November, Riel invited Anglophones to attend a convention alongside Métis representatives to discuss a course of action, and on 1 December he proposed to this convention a list of rights to be demanded as a condition of union. Much of the settlement came to accept the Métis point of view, but a passionately pro-Canadian minority began organizing in opposition. Loosely constituted as the Canadian Party, this group was led by John Christian Schultz, Charles Mair, Colonel John Stoughton Dennis, and a more reticent Major Charles Boulton. McDougall attempted to assert his authority by authorizing Dennis to raise a contingent of armed men, but the Anglophone settlers largely ignored this call to arms. Schultz, however, attracted approximately fifty recruits and fortified his home and store. Riel ordered Schultz's home surrounded, and the outnumbered Canadians soon surrendered and were imprisoned in Upper Fort Garry.
Provisional government
Hearing of the unrest, Ottawa sent three emissaries to the Red River, including HBC representative Donald Alexander Smith. While they were en route, the Métis National Committee declared a provisional government on 8 December, with Riel becoming its president on 27 December.
Meetings between Riel and the Ottawa delegation took place on 5 and 6 January 1870. When these proved fruitless, Smith chose to present his case in a public forum. After large meetings on 19 and 20 January, Riel suggested the formation of a new convention split evenly between Francophone and Anglophone settlers to consider Smith's proposals. On 7 February, a new list of rights was presented to the Ottawa delegation, and Smith and Riel agreed to send representatives to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiations on that basis. The provisional government established by Louis Riel published its own newspaper titled New Nation and established the Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia to pass laws. The Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia was the first elected government at the Red River Settlement and functioned from 9 March to 24 June 1870. The assembly had 28 elected representatives, including a president, Louis Riel, an executive council (government cabinet), adjutant general (chief of military staff), chief justice and clerk.
Thomas Scott's execution
Despite the progress on the political front, the Canadian party continued to plot against the provisional government. They attempted to recruit supporters to overthrow Riel. However, they suffered a setback on 17 February, when forty-eight men, including Boulton and Thomas Scott, were arrested near Fort Garry.
Boulton was tried by a tribunal headed by Ambroise-Dydime Lépine and sentenced to death for his interference with the provisional government. He was pardoned, but Scott interpreted this as weakness by the Métis, who he regarded with open contempt. After Scott repeatedly quarreled with his guards, they insisted that he be tried for insubordination. At his court martial he was found guilty and was sentenced to death. Riel was repeatedly entreated to commute the sentence, but Riel responded, "I have done three good things since I have commenced: I have spared Boulton's life at your instance, I pardoned Gaddy, and now I shall shoot Scott."
Scott was soon executed by a Métis firing squad on 4 March. Riel's motivations have been the cause of much speculation, but his justification was that he felt it necessary to demonstrate to the Canadians that the Métis must be taken seriously. Protestant Canada did take notice, swore revenge, and set up a "Canada First" movement to mobilize their anger. Riel biographer Lewis Thomas noted that "as people then and later have said, it was Riel's one great political blunder".
Creation of Manitoba and the Wolseley expedition
The delegates representing the provisional government arrived in Ottawa in April. Although they initially met with legal difficulties arising from the execution of Scott, they soon entered into direct talks with Macdonald and George-Étienne Cartier. The parties agreed on several of the demands in the list of rights, including language, religious, and land rights (excepting ownership of public lands). This agreement formed the basis for the Manitoba Act, which formally admitted Manitoba into the Canadian confederation; the Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia unanimously supported joining. However, the negotiators could not secure a general amnesty for the provisional government; Cartier held that this was a question for the British government.
As a means of exercising Canadian authority in the settlement and dissuading American expansionists, a Canadian military expedition under Colonel Garnet Wolseley was dispatched to the Red River. Although the government described it as an "errand of peace", Riel learned that Canadian militia elements in the expedition meant to lynch him.
Intervening years
Amnesty question
It was not until 2 September 1870 that the new Lieutenant-governor Adams George Archibald arrived and set about the establishment of civil government. Without an amnesty, and with the Canadian militia threatening his life, Riel fled to the safety of the St. Joseph's mission across the Canada–US border in the Dakota Territory. The results of the first provincial election in December 1870 were promising for Riel, as many of his supporters came to power. Nevertheless, stress and financial troubles precipitated a serious illness—perhaps a harbinger of his future mental afflictions—that prevented his return to Manitoba until May 1871.
The settlement now faced a possible threat, from cross-border Fenian raids coordinated by his former associate William Bernard O'Donoghue. Archibald issued a call to arms in October, and assured Riel that if he participated he would not be arrested. Riel organized several companies of Métis troops for the defense of Manitoba. When Archibald reviewed the troops in St. Boniface, he made the significant gesture of publicly shaking Riel's hand, signaling that a rapprochement had been effected.
When this news reached Ontario, Mair and members of the Canada First movement whipped up anti-Riel (and anti-Archibald) sentiment. With Federal elections coming in 1872, Macdonald could ill afford further rift in Quebec–Ontario relations and so he did not offer an amnesty. Instead he quietly arranged for Taché to offer Riel a bribe of C$1,000 to remain in voluntary exile. This was supplemented by an additional £600 from Smith for the care of Riel's family.
Nevertheless, by late June Riel was back in Manitoba and was soon persuaded to run as a member of parliament for the electoral district of Provencher. However, following the early September defeat of George-Étienne Cartier in his home riding in Quebec, Riel stood aside so that Cartier—on record as being in favour of amnesty for Riel—might secure a seat in Provencher. Cartier won by acclamation, but Riel's hopes for a swift resolution to the amnesty question were dashed following Cartier's death on 20 May 1873. In the ensuing by-election in October 1873, Riel ran unopposed as an Independent, although he had again fled, a warrant having been issued for his arrest in September. Lépine was not so lucky; he was captured and faced trial.
Riel made his way to Montreal and, fearing arrest or assassination, vacillated as to whether he should attempt to take up his seat in the House of Commons—Edward Blake, the Premier of Ontario, had announced a bounty of $5,000 for his arrest. Riel was the only Member of Parliament who was not present for the great Pacific Scandal debate of 1873 that led to the resignation of the Macdonald government in November. Liberal leader Alexander Mackenzie became the interim prime minister, and a general election was held in January 1874. Although the Liberals under Mackenzie formed the new government, Riel easily retained his seat. Formally, Riel had to sign a register book at least once upon being elected, and he did so under disguise in late January. He was nevertheless stricken from the rolls following a motion supported by Schultz, who had become the member for the electoral district of Lisgar. Riel prevailed again in the resulting by-election and was again expelled.
Exile and mental illness
During this period, Riel had been staying with the Oblate fathers in Plattsburgh, New York, who introduced him to parish priest Fabien Martin dit Barnabé in the nearby village of Keeseville. It was here that he received news of Lépine's fate: following his trial for the murder of Scott, which had begun on 13 October 1874, Lépine was found guilty and sentenced to death. This sparked outrage in the sympathetic Quebec press, and calls for amnesty for both Lépine and Riel were renewed. This presented a severe political difficulty for Mackenzie, who was hopelessly caught between the demands of Quebec and Ontario. However, a solution was forthcoming when, acting on his own initiative, the Governor General Lord Dufferin commuted Lépine's sentence in January 1875. This opened the door for Mackenzie to secure from parliament an amnesty for Riel, on the condition that he remain in exile for five years.
During his time of exile, Riel was primarily concerned with religion rather than politics. Much of these emerging religious beliefs were based on a supportive letter dated 14 July 1875 that he received from Montreal's Bishop Ignace Bourget. His mental state deteriorated, and following a violent outburst he was taken to Montreal, where he was under the care of his uncle, John Lee, for a few months. But after Riel disrupted a religious service, Lee arranged to have him committed in an asylum in Longue-Pointe on 6 March 1876 under the assumed name "Louis R. David". Fearing discovery, his doctors soon transferred him to the Beauport Asylum near Quebec City under the name "Louis Larochelle". While he suffered from sporadic irrational outbursts, he continued his religious writing, composing theological tracts with an admixture of Christian and Judaic ideas. He consequently began calling himself "Louis David Riel, Prophet, Infallible Pontiff and Priest King".
Nevertheless, he slowly recovered, and was released from the asylum on 23 January 1878 with an admonition to lead a quiet life. He returned for a time to Keeseville, where he became involved in a passionate romance with Evelina Martin dite Barnabé, sister of Father Fabien. He asked her to marry him before moving west "with the avowed intention of establishing himself" before sending for her; however, their correspondence ended abruptly.
Montana and family life
In the fall of 1878, Riel returned to St. Paul, and briefly visited his friends and family. This was a time of rapid change for the Métis of the Red River—the bison on which they depended were becoming increasingly scarce, the influx of settlers was ever-increasing, and much land was sold to unscrupulous land speculators. Like other Red River Métis who had left Manitoba, Riel headed further west to start a new life. Travelling to the Montana Territory, he became a trader and interpreter in the area surrounding Fort Benton. Observing the detrimental impact of alcohol on the Métis, he engaged in an unsuccessful attempt to curtail the whisky trade.
In Pointe-au-Loup, Fort Berthold, Dakota Territory in 1881, he married the young Métis Marguerite Monet dite Bellehumeur, according to the custom of the country (à la façon du pays), on 28 April, the marriage being solemnized on 9 March 1882. Evelina learned of this marriage from a newspaper and wrote a letter accusing Riel of "infamy". Marguerite and Louis were to have three children: Jean-Louis (1882–1908); Marie-Angélique (1883–1897); and a boy who was born and died on 21 October 1885, less than one month before Riel was hanged.
Riel soon became involved in the politics of Montana, and in 1882, actively campaigned on behalf of the Republican Party. He brought a suit against a Democrat for rigging a vote, but was then himself accused of fraudulently inducing British subjects to take part in the election. In response, Riel applied for United States citizenship and was naturalized on 16 March 1883. With two young children, he had by 1884 settled down and was teaching school at the St. Peter's Jesuit mission in the Sun River district of Montana.
North-West Rebellion
Main article: North-West RebellionFollowing the Red River Resistance, Métis travelled west and settled in the Saskatchewan Valley. But by the 1880s, the rapid collapse of the buffalo herd was causing near starvation among the First Nations. This was exacerbated by a reduction in government assistance, and by a general failure of Ottawa to live up to its treaty obligations. The Métis were likewise obliged to give up the hunt and take up agriculture—but this transition was accompanied by complex issues surrounding land claims similar to those that had previously arisen in Manitoba. Moreover, settlers from Europe and the eastern provinces were also moving into the Saskatchewan territories, and they too had complaints related to the administration of the territories. Virtually all parties therefore had grievances, and by 1884 Anglophone settlers, Anglo-Métis and Métis communities were holding meetings and petitioning a largely unresponsive government for redress.
In the electoral district of Lorne, a meeting of the south branch Métis was held in the village of Batoche on 24 March, and representatives voted to ask Riel to return and represent their cause. On 6 May a joint "Settler's Union" meeting was attended by both the Métis and English-speaking representatives from Prince Albert, including William Henry Jackson, an Ontario settler sympathetic to the Métis and known to them as Honoré Jackson, and James Isbister of the Anglo-Métis. It was here resolved to send a delegation to ask Riel to return.
Return of Riel
The head of the delegation to Riel was Gabriel Dumont, a respected buffalo hunter and leader of the Saint-Laurent Métis who had known Riel in Manitoba. James Isbister was the lone Anglo-Métis delegate. Riel was easily swayed to support their cause. Riel also intended to use the new position of influence to pursue his own land claims in Manitoba.
Upon his arrival Métis and Anglophone settlers alike formed an initially favourable impression of Riel following a series of speeches in which he advocated moderation and a reasoned approach. During June 1884, the Plains Cree leaders Big Bear and Poundmaker were independently formulating their complaints, and subsequently held meetings with Riel. However, the Native grievances were quite different from those of the settlers, and nothing was resolved.
Honoré Jackson and representatives of other communities set about drafting a petition to be sent to Ottawa. In the interim, Riel's support began to waver. As Riel's religious pronouncements became increasingly heretical, the clergy distanced themselves, and father Alexis André cautioned Riel against mixing religion and politics. In response to bribes by territorial lieutenant-governor and Indian commissioner Edgar Dewdney, local English-language newspapers adopted an editorial stance critical of Riel.
Nevertheless, Riel's campaign for better treatment continued, and on 16 December Riel forwarded the committee's petition to the government, along with the suggestion that delegates be sent to Ottawa to engage in direct negotiation. Receipt of the petition was acknowledged by Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau, Macdonald's Secretary of State, although Macdonald himself would later deny having ever seen it. By then many original followers had left; only 250 remained at Batoche when it fell in May 1885.
While Riel awaited response from Ottawa he considered returning to Montana, but had by February resolved to stay. Without a productive course of action, Riel began to engage in obsessive prayer, and was experiencing a significant relapse of his mental agitations. He publicly espoused an increasingly heretical doctrine, causing a deterioration in his relationship with the Catholic clergy.
On 11 February 1885, the Métis received a response to their petition. The government proposed to take a census of the North-West Territories, and to form a commission to investigate grievances. This angered a faction of the Métis who saw it as a mere delaying tactic; they favoured taking up arms at once. Riel became the leader of this faction, but he lost the support of almost all Anglophones and Anglo-Métis, and the Catholic Church. He also lost the support of the Métis faction supporting local leader Charles Nolin. But Riel, undoubtedly influenced by his messianic delusions, became increasingly supportive of this course of action. Disenchanted with the status quo, and swayed by Riel's charisma and eloquent rhetoric, hundreds of Métis remained loyal to Riel, despite his proclamations that Bishop Ignace Bourget should be accepted as pope, and that "Rome has fallen".
Open rebellion
The Provisional Government of Saskatchewan was declared at Batoche on 19 March. Riel was the political and spiritual leader and Dumont assumed responsibility for military affairs. Riel formed a council called the Exovedate (a neologism meaning "those who picked from the flock"). On 21 March, Riel's emissaries demanded that Crozier surrender Fort Carlton. Scouting near Duck Lake on 26 March, a force led by Gabriel Dumont unexpectedly chanced upon a party from Fort Carlton. In the ensuing Battle of Duck Lake, the police were routed and the North-West Rebellion was begun in earnest.
The near-completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway allowed troops from eastern Canada to quickly arrive in the territory. Knowing that he could not defeat the Canadians in direct confrontation, Dumont had hoped to force the Canadians to negotiate by engaging in a sustained campaign of guerrilla warfare; Dumont realized a modest success along these lines at the Battle of Fish Creek on 24 April 1885.
Riel, however, insisted on concentrating forces at Batoche to defend his "city of God". The outcome of the ensuing Battle of Batoche which took place from 9 to 12 May was never in doubt, and on 15 May a disheveled Riel surrendered to Canadian forces. Although Big Bear's forces managed to hold out until the Battle of Loon Lake on 3 June, the Rebellion was a dismal failure for Indigenous communities.
Trial
Main article: Trial of Louis RielSeveral individuals closely tied to the government requested that the trial be held in Winnipeg in July 1885. Some historians contend that the trial was moved to Regina because of concerns with the possibility of an ethnically mixed and sympathetic jury. Prime Minister Macdonald ordered the trial to be convened in Regina, where Riel was tried before a jury of six Anglophone Protestants. The trial began on 20 July 1885.
Riel delivered two long speeches during his trial, defending his own actions and affirming the rights of the Métis people. He rejected his lawyers' attempt to argue that he was not guilty by reason of insanity. The jury found him guilty but recommended mercy; nonetheless, Judge Hugh Richardson sentenced him to death on 1 August 1885, with the date of his execution initially set for 18 September 1885. "We tried Riel for treason," one juror later said, "And he was hanged for the murder of Scott." Lewis Thomas notes that "the government's conduct of the case was to be a travesty of justice".
Execution
Boulton writes in his memoirs that, as the date of his execution approached, Riel regretted his opposition to the defence of insanity and vainly attempted to provide evidence that he was not sane. Requests for a retrial, petitions for a commuted sentence, and an appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Britain were denied. John A. Macdonald, who was instrumental in upholding Riel's sentence, is famously quoted as saying "He shall hang though every dog in Quebec bark in his favour" (although the veracity of this quote is uncertain).
Before his execution, Riel received Father André as his spiritual advisor. He was also given writing materials and allowed to correspond with friends and relatives. Louis Riel was hanged for treason on 16 November 1885 at the North-West Mounted Police barracks in Regina.
Boulton writes of Riel's final moments:
Père André, after explaining to Riel that the end was at hand, asked him if he was at peace with men. Riel answered "Yes." The next question was, "Do you forgive all your enemies?" "Yes." Riel then asked him if he might speak. Father André advised him not to do so. He then received the kiss of peace from both the priests, and Father André exclaimed in French, "Alors, allez au ciel!" meaning "So, go to heaven!"
... last words were to say good-bye to Dr. Jukes and thank him for his kindness, and just before the white cap was pulled over his face he said, "Remerciez Madame Forget." meaning "Thank Mrs. Forget".
The cap was pulled down, and while he was praying the trap was pulled. Death was not instantaneous. Louis Riel's pulse ceased four minutes after the trap-door fell and during that time the rope around his neck slowly strangled and choked him to death. The body was to have been interred inside the gallows' enclosure, and the grave was commenced, but an order came from the Lieutenant-Governor to hand the body over to Sheriff Chapleau which was accordingly done that night.
Following the execution, Riel's body was returned to his mother's home in St. Vital, where it lay in state. On 12 December 1886, his remains were interred in the churchyard of the Saint-Boniface Cathedral following the celebration of a requiem mass.
The trial and execution of Riel caused a bitter and prolonged reaction which convulsed Canadian politics for decades. The execution was both supported and opposed by the provinces. For example, conservative Ontario strongly supported Riel's execution, but Quebec was vehemently opposed to it. Francophones were upset Riel was hanged because they thought his execution was a symbol of Anglophone dominance of Canada. The Orange Irish Protestant element in Ontario had demanded the execution as the punishment for Riel's treason and his execution of Thomas Scott in 1870. In Quebec, the politician Honoré Mercier rose to power by mobilizing the opposition in 1886.
Historiography
Historians have debated the Riel case so often and so passionately that he is the most written-about person in Canadian history. Interpretations have varied dramatically over time. The first amateur English language histories hailed the triumph of civilization, represented by English-speaking Protestants, over savagery represented by the half-breed Métis who were Catholic and spoke French. Riel was portrayed as an insane traitor and an obstacle to the expansion of Canada to the West.
By the mid-20th century academic historians had dropped the theme of savagery versus civilization, deemphasized the Métis, and focused on Riel, presenting his execution as a major cause of the bitter division in Canada along ethnocultural and geographical lines of religion and language. W. L. Morton says of the execution that it "convulsed the course of national politics for the next decade": it was well received in Ontario, particularly among Orangemen, but francophone Quebec defended Riel as "the symbol, indeed as a hero of his race". Morton concluded that some of Riel's positions were defensible, but that "they did not present a program of practical substance which the government might have granted without betrayal of its responsibilities". J. M. Bumsted in 2000 said that for Manitoba historian James Jackson, the shooting of Scott—"perhaps the result of Riel's incipient madness—was the great blemish on Riel's achievement, depriving him of his proper role as the father of Manitoba." The Catholic clergy had originally supported the Métis, but reversed themselves when they realized that Riel was leading a heretical movement. They made sure that he was not honored as a martyr. However the clergy lost their influence during the Quiet Revolution, and activists in Quebec found in Riel the perfect hero, with the image now of a freedom fighter who stood up for his people against an oppressive government in the face of widespread racist bigotry. He was made a folk hero by Métis, French Canadian and other Canadian minorities. Activists who espoused violence embraced his image; in the 1960s, the Quebec terrorist group, the Front de libération du Québec adopted the name "Louis Riel" for one of its terrorist cells.
Across Canada there emerged a new interpretation of reality in his rebellion, holding that the Métis had major unresolved grievances; that the government was indeed unresponsive; that Riel had chosen violence only as a last resort; and he was given a questionable trial, then executed by a vengeful government. John Foster said in 1985 that "the interpretive drift of the last half-century ... has witnessed increasingly shrill though frequently uncritical condemnations of Canadian government culpability and equally uncritical identification with the "victimization" of the "innocent" Métis". However, political scientist Thomas Flanagan reversed his views after editing Riel's writings: he argued that "the Métis grievances were at least partly of their own making", that Riel's violent approach was unnecessary given the government's response to his initial "constitutional agitation", and "that he received a surprisingly fair trial".
An article by Doug Owram appearing in the Canadian Historical Review in 1982 found that Riel had become "a Canadian folk hero", even "mythical", in English Canada, corresponding with the designation of Batoche as a national historic site and the compilation of his writings. That compilation consisted of three volumes of letters, diaries, and other prose writings; a fourth volume of his poetry; and a fifth volume which contained reference materials. Edited by George Stanley, Raymond Huel, Gilles Martel, Thomas Flanagan and Glen Campbell, this work "ma it possible to think comprehensively about Riel's life and his achievements", but was also criticized for some of its editorial decisions. In a 2010 speech, Beverley McLachlin, then Chief Justice of Canada, summed up Riel as being a rebel by the standards of the time but a patriot "viewed through our modern lens".
Legacy
The Saskatchewan Métis' requested land grants were all provided by the government by the end of 1887, and the government resurveyed the Métis river lots in accordance with their wishes. However, much of the land was soon bought by speculators who later turned huge profits from it. Riel's worst fears were realized—following the failed rebellion, the French language and Roman Catholic religion faced increasing marginalization in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba, as exemplified by the controversy surrounding the Manitoba Schools Question. The Métis themselves were increasingly forced to live in shantytowns on undesirable land. Saskatchewan did not become a province until 1905.
Riel's execution and Macdonald's refusal to commute his sentence caused lasting discord in Quebec. Honoré Mercier exploited the discontent to reconstitute the Parti National. This party, which promoted Quebec nationalism, won a majority in the 1886 Quebec election. The federal election of 1887 likewise saw significant gains by the federal Liberals. This led to the victory of the Liberal party under Wilfrid Laurier in the federal election of 1896, which in turn set the stage for the domination of Canadian federal politics (particularly in Quebec) by the Liberal party in the 20th century.
Since the 1980s, numerous federal politicians have introduced private member's bills seeking to pardon Riel or recognize him as a Father of Confederation. In 1992, the House of Commons passed a resolution recognizing "the unique and historic role of Louis Riel as a founder of Manitoba and his contribution in the development of Confederation". The CBC's Greatest Canadian project ranked Riel as the 11th "Greatest Canadian" on the basis of a public vote.
On 19 February 2024, Riel was formally recognized as Manitoba's first premier by virtue of The Louis Riel Act.
Commemorations
Louis Riel statue at the Manitoba Legislative Building grounds in Winnipeg"Tortured" Louis Riel statue at the Université de Saint-BonifaceIn 2007, Manitoba's provincial government voted to recognize Louis Riel Day as a provincial holiday, observed on the third Monday of February.
Two statues of Riel are located in Winnipeg. One of these statues, the work of architect Étienne Gaboury and sculptor Marcien Lemay, depicts Riel as a naked and tortured figure. It was unveiled in 1971 and stood in the grounds of the Manitoba Legislative Building for 23 years. After much outcry (especially from the Métis community) that the statue was an undignified misrepresentation, the statue was removed and placed at the Université de Saint-Boniface. It was replaced with a statue of Louis Riel designed by Miguel Joyal depicting Riel as a dignified statesman. The unveiling ceremony was on 12 May 1996, in Winnipeg. A statue of Riel on the grounds of the Saskatchewan Legislative Building in Regina was installed and later removed for similar reasons.
In numerous communities across Canada, Riel is commemorated in the names of streets, schools, neighbourhoods, and other buildings. Examples in Winnipeg include the landmark Esplanade Riel pedestrian bridge linking old Saint-Boniface with Downtown Winnipeg, and the Louis Riel School Division. The student centre at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon is named after Riel, as is the Louis Riel Trail. There are schools named after Louis Riel in four major Canadian cities: Calgary, Montreal, Ottawa and Winnipeg.
Portrayals of Riel's role in the Red River Resistance include the 1979 CBC television film Riel and Canadian cartoonist Chester Brown's acclaimed 2003 graphic novel Louis Riel: A Comic-Strip Biography. An opera about Riel entitled Louis Riel was commissioned for Canada's centennial celebrations in 1967; it was written by Harry Somers, with an English and French libretto by Mavor Moore and Jacques Languirand.
See also
- History of Manitoba
- List of Canadian First Nations leaders
- Métis National Council
- The Canadian Crown and Aboriginal peoples
Footnotes
- Bumsted 1992, pp. xiii, 31
- Bumsted, J. M. (1987). "The 'Mahdi' of Western Canada: Lewis Riel and His Papers". The Beaver. 67 (4): 47–54.
- Bumsted, J. M.; Smyth, Julie (25 March 2015). "Red River Colony". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Hamon 2019, p. 32
- Payment, Diane (1980). Riel Family: Home and Lifestyle at St-Vital, 1860–1910 (PDF) (Report). Parks Canada. p. 32. Report No. 379.
- ^ Thomas, Lewis H. (2016) . "Riel, Louis (1844–85)". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 11.
- Morton, W. L. (1976). "Riel, Louis (1817–64)". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 9.
- Stanley 1963, pp. 13–20
- Hamon 2019, p. 30
- ^ Mitchell, W.O. (1 February 1952). "The Riddle of Louis Riel Part 1". Maclean's. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020.
- Goldsborough, Gordon (16 February 2020). "Louis 'David' Riel (1844–1885)". Memorable Manitobans. Manitoba Historical Society.
- ^ "Louis Riel – One Life, One Vision" (PDF). Société historique de Saint-Boniface / Centre du patrimoine. 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
- Stanley 1963, pp. 26–28
- ^ Markson, ER (1965). "The Life and Death of Louis Riel a Study in Forensic Psychiatry Part 1 – A Psychoanalytic Commentary". Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal. 10 (4): 246–252. doi:10.1177/070674376501000404. PMID 14341671.
- ^ Stanley, George F. G.; Gaudry, Adam (9 May 2016). "Louis Riel". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Stanley 1963, p. 33
- "Louis Riel". Métis Nation of Ontario. 2006. Archived from the original on 7 July 2007.
- Stanley et al. 1985, pp. xxv & xxvi, Stanley's Foreword: "The Fréchette experience is, however, open to question."
- Stanley 1963, pp. 13–34
- ^ Bumsted, J. M.; Foot, Richard (22 November 2019). "Red River Rebellion". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Dorge, Lionel (1969). "Bishop Taché and the Confederation of Manitoba, 1969–1970". MHS Transactions. 3 (26).
- ^ Brodbeck, Tom (13 December 2019). "The Riel deal". Winnipeg Free Press.
- Read, Colin (1982). "The Red River Rebellion and J. S. Dennis, 'Lieutenant and Conservator of the Peace'". Manitoba History (3).
- Read, Colin (1982). "Dennis, John Stoughton (1820–1885)". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 11.
- "Red River Resistance". Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
- "Louis Riel". From Sea to Sea. CBC. 2001. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
- "The Execution of Thomas Scott". From Sea to Sea. CBC. 2001. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
- Mitchell, Ross (1960). "John Christian Schultz, M.D. – 1840–1896". Manitoba Pageant. 5 (2).
- Reford, Alexander (1998). "Smith, Donald Alexander, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 14.
- "Local Laws". New Nation. Vol. 1, no. 18. 15 April 1870. p. 3.
- "Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia". Indigenous & Northern Relations. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- ^ Dick, Lyle (2004–2005). "Nationalism and Visual Media in Canada: The Case of Thomas Scott's Execution". Manitoba History. 48 (Autumn/Winter): 2–18.
- Salhany 2020, p. 25
- Bélanger, Claude (2007). "The 'Murder' of Thomas Scott". The Quebec History Encyclopedia. Marianopolis College.
- Boulton 1985, p. 51
- Bumsted 2000, p. 3
- Anastakis 2015, p. 27
- Berger, Thomas (2015). "The Manitoba Metis Decision and the Uses of History". Manitoba Law Journal. 38 (1): 1–28. doi:10.29173/mlj920.
- Bowles, Richard S. (1968). "Adams George Archibald, First Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba". MHS Transactions. 3 (25).
- Huel 2003, p. 117
- ^ Swan, Ruth; Jerome, Edward A. (2000). "'Unequal justice:' The Metis in O'Donoghue's Raid of 1871". Manitoba History (39 Spring / Summer).
- Brodbeck, Tom (10 July 2020). "Métis stepped up for Crown, got stepped on for their trouble". Winnipeg Free Press.
- Gwyn 2011, pp. 150–151
- "Relations with First Nations and Métis". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- "Louis Riel (1844–1885): Biography" (PDF). Virtual Museum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2020. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- Marleau, Robert; Montpetit, Camille (2000). "The House of Commons and Its Members – Notes 351–373". House of Commons Procedure and Practice. Parliament of Canada.
- Tolton 2011, p. 19
- ^ "Rethinking Riel – Was Louis Riel Mentally Ill?". CBC. 2006.
- ^ Littmann, S.K. (1978). "A Pathography of Louis Riel". Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal. 23 (7): 449–462. doi:10.1177/070674377802300706. PMID 361196.
- ^ Campbell, Glen; Flanagan, Tom (Fall 2019). "Louis Riel's romantic interests". Manitoba History (90): 2–12.
- "L'arbre généalogique de Louis Riel" (PDF). Société historique de Saint-Boniface / Centre du patrimoine. 2020.
- Payment, Diane (1980). Riel Family: Home and Lifestyle at St-Vital, 1860–1910 (PDF) (Report). Parks Canada, Historical Research Division, Prairie Region. Manuscript Report Number 379. Map of Figure 10 points east of mouth of Rivière au Lait & Missouri River towards Ft. Berthold, Dakota Territory and/or Pointe au Loup.
- "Louis Riel (October 22, 1844 – November 16, 1885)". Library and Archives Canada. Archived from the original on 4 May 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- ^ Beal, Bob; MacLeod, Rod; Foot, Richard (30 July 2019). "North-West Rebellion". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- ^ "1885 Northwest Resistance". Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- Flanagan, Thomas (1991). "Louis Riel's Land Claims". Manitoba History. 21 (Spring).
- Gaudry, Adam (9 September 2019). "Gabriel Dumont". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Smyth, David (1998). "Isbister, James". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 14.
- Miller 2004, p. 44
- Payment, Diane P. (1994). "Nolin, Charles". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 13.
- Dumontet, Monique (1994). "Essay 16 Controversy in the Commemoration of Louis Riel". Mnemographia Canadensis. 2.
- ^ Ouellette, Robert-Falcon (Autumn 2014). "The Second Métis War of 1885: A Case Study of Non-Commissioned Member Training and the Intermediate Leadership Program" (PDF). Canadian Military Journal. 14 (4): 54–65.
- Foster, Keith; Oosterom, Nelle (13 February 2014). "Shifting Riel-ity: The 1885 North-West Rebellion". Canada's History.
- "The Battle of Fish Creek (April 23, 1885)" (PDF). Virtual Museum. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- Mein, Stewart (2006). "North-West Resistance". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021.
- Basson 2008, p. 66
- Stanley 1979, p. 23
- Boulton 1886, p. 411
- Gwyn 2011, p. 469
- Mitchell, W.O. (15 February 1952). "The Riddle of Louis Riel: Conclusion". Maclean's. Archived from the original on 20 September 2020.
- "Louis Riel (October 22, 1844 – November 16, 1885)". Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
- Boulton 1886, p. 413
- ^ Boulton 1886, p. 414
- Stewart 2002, p. 156
- Read, Geoff; Webb, Todd (2012). "'The Catholic Mahdi of the North West': Louis Riel and the Metis Resistance in Transatlantic and Imperial Context". Canadian Historical Review. 93 (2): 171–195. doi:10.3138/chr.93.2.171.
- Hamon 2019, p. 14
- Francis, Jones & Smith 2009, pp. 306–307
- Sprague 1988, p. 1
- Morton 1963, p. 371
- Morton 1963, p. 369
- Bumsted 2000, p. 17
- Perin 1990, p. 259
- Saywell 1973, p. 94
- ^ Flanagan 2000, p. x
- Foster, John E. (1985). "Review of Riel and the Rebellion 1885 Reconsidered By Thomas Flanagan". Great Plains Quarterly. 5 (4): 259–260.
- Owram, Douglas (1982). "The Myth of Louis Riel". The Canadian Historical Review. 63 (3): 315–336. doi:10.3138/CHR-063-03-01.
- Stanley et al. 1985
- Hamon 2019, p. 15
- McLachlin, Beverley (2011). "Louis Riel: Patriot Rebel" (PDF). Manitoba Law Journal. 35 (1): 1–13.
- Flanagan 2000, p. 82
- Flanagan 2000, p. 60
- Robinson, Amanda (6 November 2018). "Métis Scrip in Canada". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Godbout 2020, pp. 151–154
- "1885 – Aftermath". Our Legacy. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
- Tattrie, Jon (3 February 2015). "Saskatchewan and Confederation". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- Godbout 2020, p. 152
- "Parti national". The Canadian Encyclopedia. 19 February 2014.
- Godbout 2020, p. 153
- ^ Reid 2008, p. 4.
- Flanagan 2000, p. 179
- "And the Greatest Canadian of all time is..." CBC. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
- Buffie, Nicole (19 February 2024). "Riel Formally Recognized as First Premier". Winnipeg Free Press.
- Reid 2008, p. 5.
- "Louis Riel Day holiday (3rd Mon. in Feb.)". Government of Manitoba. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- "Louis Riel Statue". Winnipeg Architecture Foundation. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
- ^ Bower, Shannon (2001). ""Practical Results": The Riel Statue Controversy at the Manitoba Legislative Building". Manitoba History. 42 (Autumn / Winter 2001–2002).
- "Private Members' Business regarding An Act to Revoke the Conviction of Louis David Riel – Bill C297". Hansard Debates for Friday, November 22, 1996. House Publications Parliament of Canada. 1996.
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References
- Anastakis, Dimitry (2015). Death in the Peaceable Kingdom: Canadian History since 1867 through Murder, Execution, Assassination, and Suicide. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1442606364.
- Basson, Lauren L. (2008). White enough to be American?. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5837-0.
- Bell, John (2006). Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe. Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-55002-659-7.
- Boulton, Charles Arkoll (1886). Reminiscences of the North-West Rebellions. Grip Printing & Publishing Co.
- Boulton, Charles Arkoll (1985). Robertson, Heather (ed.). I Fought Riel. James Lorimer & Company. ISBN 0-88862-935-4.
- Bumsted, J. M. (1992). The Peoples of Canada: A Post-Confederation History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-540914-0.
- Bumsted, J. M. (2000). Thomas Scott's Body: And Other Essays on Early Manitoba History. University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 978-0887553875.
- Flanagan, Thomas (2000). Riel and the Rebellion: 1885 Reconsidered (2nd ed.). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802082823.
- Francis, R. Douglas; Jones, Richard; Smith, Donald B., eds. (2009). Journeys: A History of Canada. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0176442446.
- Godbout, Jean-François (2020). Lost on Division: Party Unity in the Canadian Parliament. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1487535421.
- Gwyn, Richard J. (2011). Nation Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times. Life and Times of Sir John A. Macdonald Series. Vol. 2. Random House Canada. ISBN 978-0307356444.
- Hamon, Max (2019). The Audacity of His Enterprise: Louis Riel and the Métis Nation That Canada Never Was, 1840–1875. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0773559370.
- Huel, R.J.A. (2003). Archbishop A.-A. Taché of St. Boniface: The "Good Fight" and the Illusive Vision. Missionary Oblates Mary Immaculate. University of Alberta Press. ISBN 978-0-88864-406-0.
- Miller, James Rodger (2004). Reflections on Native-newcomer Relations: Selected Essays (2nd ed.). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-8669-1.
- Morton, William Lewis (1963). The Kingdom of Canada: A General History from Earliest Times. McClelland and Stewart.
- Reid, Jennifer (2008). Louis Riel and the Creation of Modern Canada: Mythic Discourse and the Postcolonial State. University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-4415-1. OCLC 1037748071.
- Perin, Roberto (1990). Rome in Canada: The Vatican and Canadian Affairs in the Late Victorian Age. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0802067623. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt2tv08x.
- Salhany, Roger (2020). A Rush to Judgment: The Unfair Trial of Louis Riel. Dundurn. ISBN 978-1459746107.
- Saywell, John T., ed. (1973). Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs: 1971. University of Toronto Press. doi:10.3138/9781442671850. ISBN 978-1442671850.
- Sprague, D.N. (1988). Canada and the Métis, 1869–1885. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 0-88920-958-8.
- Stanley, George (1963). Louis Riel. McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 0-07-092961-0.
- Stanley, George F.G. (1979) . Louis Riel: Patriot or Rebel? (PDF). The Canadian Historical Association Booklets, 2 (8th ed.). Canadian Historical Association. ISBN 0-88798-003-1.
- Stanley, George; Huel, Raymond; Martel, Gilles; Flanagan, Thomas; Campbell, Glen, eds. (1985). The Collected Writings of Louis Riel/Les Ecrits Complets de Louis Riel. University of Alberta Press. ISBN 0-88864-091-9.
- Stewart, Roderick (2002). Wilfrid Laurier. Dundurn. ISBN 978-1770707559.
- Tolton, Gordon Errett (2011). Cowboy Cavalry: The Story of the Rocky Mountain Rangers. Heritage House Publishing. ISBN 978-1926936024.
Further reading
- Barkwell, Lawrence J.; Dorion, Leah; Prefontaine, Darren (2001). Metis Legacy: A Historiography and Annotated Bibliography. Pemmican Publications Inc. / Gabriel Dumont Institute. ISBN 1-894717-03-1.
- Braz, Albert (2003). The False Traitor: Louis Riel in Canadian Culture. University of Toronto Press.
- Flanagan, Thomas (1979). Louis 'David' Riel: prophet of the new world. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-88780-118-8.
- Flanagan, Thomas (1983). Riel and the Rebellion. Western Producer Prairie Books. ISBN 0-88833-108-8.
- Flanagan, Thomas (1992). Louis Riel. Canadian Historical Association. ISBN 0-88798-180-1.
- Hansen, Hans (2014). Riel's Defence: Perspectives on His Speeches (1st ed.). McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0773543362.
- Kinsey, Howard Joseph (1952). Strange Empire: A Narrative of the Northwest (Louis Riel and the Metis People). William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-87351-298-7.
- Knox, Olive (1949–1950). "The Question of Louis Riel's Insanity". MHS Transactions. 3 (6).
- Siggins, Maggie (1994). Riel: a life of revolution. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-00-215792-6.
- Stanley, G. F. G. (1964). "Louis Riel". Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française. 18 (1): 14–26. doi:10.7202/302338ar.
- Woodcock, George (March 1959). "Louis Riel: Defender of the Past". History Today. 9 (3): 198–207.
External links
- Works by Louis Riel at Open Library
- Works by Louis Riel at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Louis Riel at the Internet Archive
- CBC Digital Archives: Rethinking Riel
- Heritage Minutes: Historica Minutes (History by the Minute): Louis Riel
- Louis Riel – University of Saskatchewan library
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- Louis Riel
- 1844 births
- 1885 deaths
- 19th-century executions of American people
- 19th-century members of the House of Commons of Canada
- Burials at Saint Boniface Cathedral
- Canadian emigrants to the United States
- Canadian folklore
- Canadian Métis people
- Canadian revolutionaries
- Canadian Roman Catholics
- Executed Canadian people
- Executed politicians
- Executed revolutionaries
- Independent MPs in the Canadian House of Commons
- Indigenous Members of the House of Commons of Canada
- Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Manitoba
- Métis history
- Métis politicians
- People executed by Canada by hanging
- People executed for treason against Canada
- People of the North-West Rebellion
- People of the Red River Rebellion
- Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)
- Petit Séminaire de Montréal alumni
- Prophets
- Pre-Confederation Saskatchewan people
- Refugees in the United States
- Riel family (Canada)