Completion of the railway in 1885 to Vancouver from the ports
of the Atlantic Ocean made Winnipeg the immigration gateway to
the Canadian West.
European immigrants arrived by shipload at ports on the St.
Lawrence River. After weeks spent in quarantine camps to ensure
they were not suffering from contagious diseases such as smallpox,
the immigrants were allowed to board trains and head westward.
Cheap land was the lure that the Canadian Pacific Railway
and the Canadian government used to attract immigrants to the
West. The railways wanted the West to grow to increase its
business of moving people and freight. The government wanted
to populate the vast Prairie with new Canadians to establish
Canadian control in an area many Americans argued should be
absorbed into the United States.
Their eyes sore and red from tiny coal cinders spewed by smoking
locomotives, the immigrants arrived in Winnipeg, tired and
dirty but full of hope for a new and better life. Many found
new hope further west, on the wide-open Prairie. Their gift
to their children and grandchildren would be today's prosperous
farms that export their wheat, soybeans, mustard, and other
grains around the world.
Some immigrants stayed in Winnipeg to practise the trades
they had mastered in Europe. They divided the city into neighbourhoods
based on national origin and economic class.
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It would be hard for any one group to claim the status of
first permanent occupants of the junction of the Red and the
Assiniboine Rivers. Winnipeg has always been a refuge for new
groups seeking prosperity and who, in the process, sometimes
pushed aside previous occupants.
Since the last ice age, the fork of the Red and the Assiniboine
has been a stopping point for nomadic Native communities seeking
fish and shelter from the wide-open Prairie.
The first known permanent settlement in Winnipeg was a community
of Native peoples, European adventurers, and Métis brought
together by the fur trade.
Cree and Assiniboine
When the European fur traders arrived with their trinkets,
guns, and diseases, the most common visitors to the river fork
were Cree and Assiniboine people. Both Native communities were
virtually destroyed by their first contact with European viruses
and bacteria against which they had developed no immunity.
By 1790, the area was essentially uninhabited.
Saulteaux
The first group migration to what is now Winnipeg was an expedition
of Ojibwa from Ontario in search of more abundant fish and
game. Led by Chief Peguis at the end of the 1700s, they came
to be known as the Saulteaux in their new territory. The few
remaining Cree and Assiniboine welcomed the newcomers as potential
allies against their enemies, the Lakota from the South, who
fought them for control of the grasslands and bison herd.
Scottish and Irish
Chief Peguis, in turn, welcomed the next immigrant wave -
the Scottish and Irish settlers of Lord Selkirk in 1812. The
Saulteaux alliance with the settlers of the new Red River Colony,
and the Hudson's Bay Company, grew stronger over the years
as they fought off attacks sponsored by the rival fur-trader,
the North West Company.
French-speaking Canadians
In 1818, a French-speaking priest from Quebec opened a tiny
Roman Catholic mission at the new Red River Colony. Encouraged
by Lord Selkirk in vain hope of settling the Métis into
lives of farmers, the priest's mission of St. Boniface was
the nucleus of what would become Canada's largest French-speaking,
Roman Catholic community outside of Quebec. Attracted by the
presence of St. Boniface, thousands of French-speaking settlers
from Quebec, the northeastern United States, and France would
later join the rush to settle the Prairies.
Ever since early settlement in St. Boniface, the survival
and health of St. Boniface as a French-speaking community has
been a continuing test of whether Canada can accommodate French-speaking
communities outside Quebec.
The decision in 1890 by the government of Manitoba to reverse
the terms of Manitoba's 1870 entry into Canada by abolishing
the right to publicly-funded Catholic schools remains a major
grievance of French-speaking Canadians today. Only the Roman
Catholic church could afford to run public schools in French.
By cutting government funding to the church-run schools in
1890, the provincial government effectively killed the hopes
of French-speaking Canadians for equal treatment in the settlement
of the Canadian West.
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Métis and Country-born
When the Hudson's Bay Company bought out the North West Company
in 1821, hundreds of Métis hunters and laborers lost
their jobs and collected around the Red River Colony to seek
work.
The Métis were French-speaking, Roman Catholic descendants
of Native women and French fur traders. The word "Métis" comes
from the French métissage, which means mixing of races.
The descendants of the marriages of Native women and English-speaking,
Protestant fur traders were called "Country-born".
Together, the two communities of mixed Native and European
parentage quickly became the majority group in the Red River
Colony after 1821.
Chief Peguis and his Saulteaux quickly lost political and
economic power to the Métis and Country-born when the
conversion of the grasslands from wilderness to agriculture
resulted in the Saulteaux no longer being able to feed themselves
on game. Eventually, the Saulteaux were forced to give in to
the urgings of the Anglican church that they give up their
traditional ways to learn how to farm and send their children
to white-run schools.
Today, band societies in the Red River basin are organized
and usually located a significant distance from urban life.
Indian institutions, designed to help protect the quality of
life for Natives migrating to towns, still require further
development. As a consequence, there is not a lot of successful
urban adaptation on the part of Native band members.
Europeans
After Manitoba became part of Canada in 1870, and before the
railway reached Winnipeg, European settlers arrived by paddle
boats along the Red River. They had travelled by ship to the
United States East Coast and then by train to the Midwest.
There, they boarded the sternwheel paddle boats that plied
the waterway from North Dakota to Winnipeg. Immigration sheds
were built at the docks in Winnipeg to process the immigrants
and send them on their way into the West.
Once the railway reached Winnipeg and beyond to the prairie
grasslands, immigration changed from a trickle of individual
adventurers to a mass rush for cheap land and a new life. As
a result, the Métis and Country-born communities lost
their jobs, businesses, and often their land to the newcomers.
Many of the immigrants, already poor in their homelands, arrived
in Winnipeg without money to continue their journey westward.
A large shanty town grew beside the railway station. Called "The
Flats," it became home to an impoverished population of
immigrants from Europe and Russia. Most of the shanty-town
dwellers were from England, Scotland, Ireland, and Russia.
Other waves of immigrants passed through Winnipeg to take
up their land purchases. Icelanders carried on north to settle
near Lake Winnipeg. Ukrainians moved inland to farm the plains
similar to those of their homeland.
The last big wave of immigration followed World War II when
thousands of people fled their devastated countries.
Eventually, most of the European immigrants succeeded in building
the base for healthy, educated, and prosperous lives for themselves
and their children. In the process, they reaffirmed the role
of the junction of the Red and the Assiniboine rivers as a
mid-continent place of meeting.
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