The British colonies of eastern North America united in 1867.
They became provinces of the new country of Canada. The new country's
leaders immediately prepared to take over the Hudson's Bay Company
lands west of Ontario.
But when the Red River Métis learned that the government
of Canada was not going to let the Métis keep their
property, they organized to fight the Canadian takeover. A
group of Métis met in their parish church in St. Norbert
in 1869. They elected a national Métis committee, with
Louis Riel as its leader.
The Métis descended from the marriages of French-speaking
fur traders and First Nations women.
Riel led a band of 500 Métis militia soldiers to invade
the Hudson Bay Company's Upper Fort Garry in Winnipeg. The
Métis declared themselves to be a provisional government
for the territory. While Riel held the fort, keeping non-Métis
people prisoner there, St. Norbert's parish priest went to
Ottawa to negotiate the entry of Manitoba into Confederation
- with a guarantee of Métis property and language rights.
The negotiations ended with the passage of the Manitoba Act
in 1870. The Manitoba Act recognized Métis rights. But,
before the news could reach Manitoba, Riel ordered the execution
of an unruly English-speaking prisoner from Ontario. This act
would be Riel's fatal error.
Following Thomas Scott's execution, Ottawa sent soldiers to
take control from Riel's militia. Public outrage in Ontario
over the execution of the prisoner meant the government would
not agree to the Métis request for an amnesty from prosecution.
As the Canadian troops approached, Riel fled into exile in
the United States.
Riel was elected to the new Canadian parliament by his Métis
supporters three times. But, because he was wanted for Scott's
murder, he did not return to Canada to take his seat. Without
that killing, Riel might have become a respected statesmen,
able to defend the rights his people had won in the Manitoba
Act.
Instead, those rights were ignored. Métis claims to
land were denied. The official status of their French language
was revoked. The Métis declined in power and many of
them moved westward in search of greater freedom and prosperity.
Riel finally returned to Canada in 1884 to take charge of
another Métis uprising in Saskatchewan. This time, he
was captured and hanged. His execution increased his stature
as a hero for many French-speaking Canadians across the country.
In 1992, the provincial government formally recognized Louis
Riel as a founding father of Manitoba. But the controversy
continued over the statue raised to honour him. His supporters
protested that the statue of a partially-clothed Riel was an
indignity. So, in 1996, a new statue of Louis Riel, fully-clothed,
was put in place.
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