In 1832, Anglican missionary William Cockran tried to convert
Red River Natives to Christianity and a life of farming. The
plan failed. Cockran concluded that Natives were ill-suited
for farming. Today, archeological investigations have proved
the Anglican missionary to have been wrong.
Several thousand years before the arrival of European immigrants,
many Native nations in North America had developed sophisticated
farming methods. Four centuries before Europeans settled beside
the Red River, Native people were agricultural pioneers in
the valley.
Recent archaeological digs reveal a thriving Native farming
site on the river's east bank at Lockport, 15 kilometres north
of present-day Winnipeg. The origin and identity of this farming
people are unknown.
It made sense to locate farm gardens near the river. Water
for crop irrigation and the presence of fish to balance the
diet were two obvious advantages. An added benefit of the Lockport
site was the nutrient-rich layer of new soil left behind by
receding flood waters each spring.
Clearing the land of tall, prairie grasses, trees, and brush
required the quarrying and fashioning of stone knives and axes.
Wooden digging sticks were used to break up the soil. Hoes
made of wood and the shoulder blade of the bison were used
to till the soil.
Corn was planted in small hillocks and arranged in rows one
metre apart. Beans, squash, and flowers may also have been
grown. A meal comprised of corn and beans would have provided
Native families with the same complete protein as one containing
meat.
By 2,000 years ago, corn was being grown as far east as the
Atlantic seaboard and as far west as the Rocky Mountains. The
Native farmers at Lockport developed a strain of corn that
could mature in the typical 100-day growing season near the
present-day Canadian border with the United States Midwest.
The adaptation of corn to the long-day, short-season environment
of the Red River Valley - from the plant's original short-day,
long-season climate in Central America - testifies to the selective
plant breeding skills of these first farmers.
By 700 years ago, farming techniques had spread throughout
the continent. The population grew, thanks to more stable food
supplies. But a severe drought 600 years ago parched the mid-continent.
Many farming communities were forced to relocate to major river
valleys where there was a reliable water supply. Then, 500
years ago, during the so-called Little Ice Age, summers became
much shorter and cooler. With this climatic change, the pendulum
swung back to hunting, fishing and food-gathering as the primary
ways to survive. The skills of agriculture fell into disuse
and were virtually forgotten.
Top
Adapted from First Farmers in the Red River Valley, Historic
Resources Branch, Manitoba Culture, Heritage and Citizenship,
1994.
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