Catholic Missions established in the Western Interior

Summary

Between 1845 and 1855 the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate established a series of missions across the west, including at Ile-à-la-Crosse, where many Metis voyageurs wintered. In 1846, two Catholic priests, Alexandre Taché and Louis Richer Leflèche arrived at Ile-à-la-Crosse to establish the St Peter mission.These missions became bases of operations from which clergy travelled in the 1850s and 1860s to seasonal camps on the North and South Saskatchewan Rivers to spread Christianity.

Implications
The establishment of a Roman Catholic mission at Île-à-la-Crosse in 1846 was intended to serve a double purpose of conversion and controlling the movement of hunters and trappers, and cementing HBC suppliers in the region. Historical evidence has demonstrated that missionaries were intolerant of Indigenous religions and livelihoods, and attempted to remove Indigenous practices and beliefs from Metis culture in order to further the Christian colonization of the West.
Sources

PAA, OMI, Little chronicle of St. Laurent, 1875-1877 [Father André] (translation).

Date
1845-00-00
Theme(s)

Metis Economic Activity for the Period of 1840-1870

Summary

Between the 1840s and early 1870s the western interior economy was characterized by the coexistence of native economies and European capitalism. By becoming middlemen in the fur trade, Metis individuals created an entrepreneurial niche for themselves, which was lucrative for many Metis merchant families. A few examples include the Grants, Brelands, McGillis, Gingras, Fishers, Letendres and Hamelins. As long as dual societies and economies persisted on the northern plains, these Metis traders prospered. The Metis “in-between” identity had the potential to be economically advantageous. Beginning in the mid to late 1870s, the disappearance of the buffalo and the movement of First Nations peoples to reserves led to a drastic alteration in the western economy and an end to the Metis’ influential middleman position.

Result

Metis scholars such as Howard Adams and Ron Bourgeault have argued that discrimination and mistreatment by non-Indigenous settlers—not how the economy developed—was the main factor in the marginalization of the Metis.

Implications
Lacking an understanding of the new commercial system that became prevalent in the west (centered around agriculture and European capitalism), and having limited access to capital, Metis merchants were marginalized within the western economy.
Date
1840-00-00
Theme(s)

Arrival of Forces of Colonel Garnet Wolseley in Manitoba

Summary

The arrival of the expedition under Colonel Garnet Wolseley in 1870 signalled a transition in the lives Indigenous peoples in Manitoba. The expedition included Ontario volunteers and Canadian settlers hoping to avenge the death of Thomas Scott. They acted in defiance of the rule of law. Winnipeg descended into mob rule in 1871 and 1872. The French Metis population was threatened continuously at the Land Office near Fort Garry, and French Metis entering Winnipeg were in jeopardy of being harmed.

Implications
The arrival of Wolseley’s force, and the continued flood of new settlers, many of whom were linguistically and religiously intolerant, led to a great exodus of many French Métis between 1870 and 1881. Many French Metis individuals migrated West into Saskatchewan. In some cases, they sold their land to incoming English Protestants as the Métis were being pushed out of their communities.
Date
1870-00-00

Red River Resistance, Manitoba Act of 1870 and Reign of Terror

Summary

The Manitoba Act was passed at the closing of the Red River Resistance in 1870, which provided for the province of Manitoba and allowed the Red River settlement to enter Confederation as Canada's fifth province. Prime Minister J.A. MacDonald stated that he would compensate the Metis in the new province in order to settle the west peacefully, although the provincial land would be owned publicly. There were also provisions in the Act which protected the French language and Roman Catholic religion. Section 31 of the Act provided land for the children of Metis heads of families, which amounted to 1.4 million acres, to be divided into tracts and allotted to Métis families by Lieutenant-Governor Adam Archibald. Section 32 guaranteed all previous settlers possession of the lots they occupied before 15 July 1870, as well as hay rights in the outer two miles of various river lots. An amendment to section 32 in 1874 provided $160 scrip redeemable by Métis heads of families. The 1874 amendment also stated that improvements needed to be made to the land in order to obtain the title. Following the creation of the Manitoba Act, Prime Minister MacDonald refused to distribute the land legally owed to Metis people. The plan of Lieutenant Governor Archibald was to allow the Metis to maintain the river lot system of farming and distribute the 1.4 million acres over a period of approximately one year. Distribution of land in fulfillment of section 31 took over a decade, however, causing many frustrated Metis people to migrate west into Alberta and Saskatchewan, as well as the United States. As well, government officials changed their minds about the 1.4 million acres, stating that the claimed land was now required to be outside the province of Manitoba. They also changed the date of proof of occupation to a date when most Metis would be away from their farms hunting buffalo. Shortly after the Act was passed, MacDonald sent 1200 troops to Fort Garry (now known as Winnipeg), to surveil and control the new province. The troops, as well as the influx of settlers, terrorized the Metis residents. Many Metis individuals were murdered, beaten, and raped. Metis landholders were frequently harassed in non-physical ways as well.


 

Result

The above summary of events demonstrates that there were several federal tactics employed to make it exceedingly difficult for the Metis to obtain their land title after scrip had been issued.  Prime Minister MacDonald actively vetoed the plans of Lieutenant Governor Archibald, in the hopes that delaying the distribution of land to the Metis would allow white settlers to outnumber the Metis, forcing them to leave.  These federal delay tactics were effective, as many Metis migrated, although they continued to petition the government in Ottawa to settle their outstanding claims.  As well, the Metis were still involved in the buffalo economy.  The government was aware that many Metis families left their farms for extended periods of time while on the hunt, during which they allowed non-Aboriginal settlers to occupy and steal Metis farm lots .  As a result of these federal tactics, approximately 65 percent of Metis people lost their land to non-Aboriginal homesteaders in Manitoba.

The efforts of MacDonald to send a large number of troops into the newly formed province demonstrate a retaliatory effort to keep the region under tight state control.  The permissive attitude of the government towards methods of psychological and physical intimidation including murder, physical beatings and rape of an already oppressed people would have served to severely fracture the sense of community safety and family cohesion.  The psychological trauma caused by rape in particular is known to have long-term and even intergenerational consequences for emotional and mental health if appropriate or sufficient social supports are not available.  These tactics of physical and psychological violence were used to keep the Metis in a position of political subordination.  The researcher notes that in the era of the modern state, criteria provided by the United Nations in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court would classify the actions of the government as war crimes (extensive destruction and appropriation of property, not justified by military necessity and carried out unlawfully and wantonly) and crimes against humanity (murder, rape, persecution based on ethnicity). 


 

Sources
  • An Act to amend and continue the Act 32 and 33 Victoria, chapter 3 ; and to establish and provide for the Government of the Province of Manitoba, S.C. 1870, c. 3

 

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Date
1870-05-12
Documents
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Amalgamation of the Hudson's Bay Company and North West Company

Summary

Following the amalgamation of the Hudson’s Bay Company and the North West Company in 1821, the type of employment that Indigenous men were able to secure changed drastically. Before the amalgamation of the two companies, Indigenous men were paid an equal salary to their European counterparts, and were able to work in a wide range of positions. Some men were even able to secure the coveted position of officer. Their skills as hunters and trappers were valued, and men with ambition, regardless of ethnicity, were rewarded with more responsibility and more prestigious positions. However, after the amalgamation in 1821, Indigenous men were no longer afforded the luxury of vertical movement within the company. They were confined to servant and labourous jobs and were openly discriminated against. It also became a rarity for Indigenous men to secure contracted work, which they had done previously. Instead, they were often restricted to being hired only seasonally. The Hudson's Bay Company also used Indigenous workers as a means of controlling European workers. They had Indigenous men perform tasks that the European men refused to do, and the company hired Indigenous workers at a lower wage than European workers to drive competition at a time where jobs were scarce.


 

Result

The amalgamation of the Hudson's Bay Company and the North West Company had profoundly negative implications for Indigenous men. The amalgamations saw the implementation of a hierarchy that was based on ethnicity. Indigenous men were excluded from economic mobility and were left only with the positions at the very bottom of the hierarchy. Without the opportunity to advance economically, many Indigenous men were doing intense physical labour for very little pay; failing to compensate men for their work resulted in many men and their families living in newly impoverished conditions because they were seen is disposable by the HBC. The hierarchy which developed is reflected in the inequitable power-relations between Indigenous men and European/Canadian societies and settlers. It was, and can remain, challenging to find consistent and meaningful work due to the way Canadian society has internalized and externalized prejudice and racism against Indigenous men.  


 

Sources
  • Judd, Carol M. "Native labour and social stratification in the Hudson's Bay Company's Northern Department. 1770–1870." Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 17, no. 4 (1980): 305-314.

 

Sub Event
Decline in work for Indigenous men
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Date
1821-00-00
Region

Racist and Gendered Perceptions of Indigenous Women

Summary

Beginning in the late 1800s, Euro-Canadian government officials found various reasons to victim-blame Indigenous women for widely felt poverty and distress. Officials claimed that they were dirty, gossipy, had no understanding of money and the economy, and most of all were immoral. This is exemplified in an 1886 controversy that arose from a newspaper article published by missionary Samuel Trivett, in which he wrote about the promiscuity of Indigenous women and the frequency of their inappropriate relations with NWMP officers, without consideration if . Canadian officials responded by denying inappropriate behaviour on the part of the NWMP. Although, they conceded that if there were incidents of such behaviour, the blame rested with Aboriginal women, who were inherently sexually promiscuous and seductive, thereby taking advantage of male police officers. Please see related database entry titled "History of Racist and Gendered Perceptions of Indigenous Women."

Implications
This is evident of long-standing popular misconceptions about Indigenous women and their morals regarding sex and sexuality. These misconceptions were commonly perpetuated in news, literary and visual media, uniformly portraying Indigenous women as highly sexual individuals. These perceptions were widely accepted by and influenced the actions of government and settler society at large. As it relates to power imbalances between Indigenous women and colonial officials, political actors failed to recognize the disadvantaged position of Indigenous women, who the state considered morally inferior by virtue of their race and gender, and the enormous power of NWMP officers who possessed a greater perceived credibility as well as the moral authority as 'officers of the law.' NWMP officers also possessed the ability to engage in abuses of power in an unaccountable manner and the government failed to protect Indigenous women as a vulnerable population from these abuses.
Sources

The Facts Respecting Indian Administration in the North-West, (Ottawa: 1886), quoted pp. 9, 12. William Donovan to L. Vankoughnet, 31 October 1886, NA, RG 10, vol. 3772, file 34983.

Date
1870-00-00