The
pioneers who settled in southwestern Manitoba in the early 1880’s
must have wondered from time to time about that decision. The trip here
was generally a bit more trouble than they could have imagined. The
promotional material they had been given routinely gave incredibly
optimistic reports about the prairie climate. There was the uncertainty
of the “Manitoba Boom” from 1881 – 82, followed by a depression in
1883. Floods in 1881 and 1882 were followed by early frosts and various
other afflictions affecting crops. Promised rail lines were slow in
coming. They endured all this.
Then in 1885 they started hearing about armed insurrection in the west.
What else could go wrong?
The fighting was many miles away, involved only a very small group of
people, and with the benefit of hindsight we know that any escalation
of that conflict was unlikely. But the settlers in rural Manitoba
didn’t know that.
So when James Henderson was awakened in the night by “a lot of yelling
and drum beating”, and witnessed a “big camp of Indians in war paint,”
he was sure that they were “going west to support Riel,” and he was
afraid.
When a rumour circulated about a plot to smuggle a Gatling Gun across
the border near Wakopa in the hope of delivering it to Riel’s forces,
it was not only believed, but widely circulated.
Accepted wisdom today tells us that the native populations across the
west almost unanimously refused to have anything to do with the Riel
uprising, and populations in the U.S. had their own battles to worry
about. Ken Coates in a scholarly look at the situation, insisted that:
“Ultimately, virtually all the rumours proved unfounded, the
accusations incorrect, and the often precipitous actions unnecessary.
The Aboriginal People of western Manitoba did not join the rebellion,
nor is there any evidence to suggest that they seriously considered
doing so. There were actually many more protestations of loyalty and
offers to assist the government than there were threats to join the
insurgents.” (Mb History Journal Autumn 1990)
Local histories remind us however that in the spring of 1885, folks
weren’t so sure. Numerous reports indicate that local native
populations were felt to be either an imminent or a potential threat.
Words like: “restless”, “impudent” and “demanding” appear in many
accounts.
All evidence indicates that when the settlers first arrived, relations
with aboriginal people were amicable. Countless entries in local
histories report as much. Was there a different attitude in 1885, or
were settlers just reading things into innocent everyday events?
It didn’t help that local officials and media had raised the “threat
level.” In Wakopa locals were sworn in as “Border Wardens” to prevent
Indians from North Dakota from coming north to help in the rebellion.
Home Guard Companies were formed across the province. Some old timers
have reported that border-area homesteaders were given Enfield rifles
with bayonets on them.
It is worth noting that the substantial North West Mounted Police
presence in the region dates from the establishment of a post in Wakopa
in 1884, well before the uprising. The reason for the establishment of
that post, as reported in the Brandon sun on August 8 of that year, was
to combat “horse and cattle” thieves. It also didn’t help that many
settlers had recently arrived from Ontario and were well aware of
sensational accounts of conflicts south of the border. As Coates
suggests, the insurrection may have exposed a long-standing fear of
Aboriginal People.
To Close for Comfort?
Another factor was our proximity to the United States; our direct
connection to events there that were much more deadly than anything
experienced here in Canada. The uprising of the Dakota in Minnesota led
by Little Crow in 1862 had left hundreds of settlers dead and many
communities ruined. At the time, groups of Dakota Santee, most likely
innocent in the matter, had settled in the Turtle Mountain area, and
many were still in the region. More recently the defeat of Custer at
Little Big Horn had caught everyone’s attention and some refugees from
that conflict had also found their way to Manitoba. Settlers were well
aware of these events. So when Mrs. Herbert Cram was left alone with
four children, we can understand why, years later, those children
remembered how afraid she was that Indians would cross the border. They
recalled how, after the children were in bed, she would take another
look outside to see that there was nothing unusual or that there were
no sounds of battle.
The “Rebellion” was over quickly, and although life in the new prairie
settlements was able to return to normal, people felt vulnerable for a
time.
A few years later Martha Belle Dunn, whose family homesteaded near
Waskada in 1889, noticed that a Mountie rode by their place regularly
all one summer. It must have made an impression on her because she
remembered it long afterwards. She told her children that she learned
many years later that the reasons for the patrols was that, “Sitting
Bull and 3000 warriors were gathered 80 miles away and ready to invade
Canada between the Turtle Mountain and the Souris River. “
We know now that such a thing was even possible.
What had been happening in and around Fort Yates, at the very southern
edge of North Dakota, was that a religious practice known as the Ghost
Dance was gaining popularity and authorities feared it would unite the
aboriginal tribes and incite them to insurrection. It was also feared
that Sitting Bull might leave his reservation with the Ghost Dancers.
These fears culminated in the attempted arrest and killing of Sitting
Bull on Dec. 15, 1890 and the massacre of 150 men women and children at
Wounded Knee shortly after on December 29.
These events were the result of fears that informed people knew were
unfounded even at the time.
Mrs. Dunn, isolated with her small children didn’t have the facts, but
a bit of the fear seems to have spread across the border.
This report from the Daily Nor’Wester shows that by 1894, border
security was becoming less of a priority.
An “undefended border” again.
Before we judge the settlers, many of whom were indeed alone and
unprotected, we should remember that during the First World War German
and Slavic immigrants were seen as potential spies and saboteurs, and
that during the Second World War, Japanese immigrants were the target
of Euro- Settler’s fears. In each case, internment camps were just one
of the more overt reactions.
. . . . .
Author: Ken Storie
Sources:
Boissevain History Book Committee. Beckoning Hills Revisited. “Ours is
a Goodly Heritage” Morton – Boissevain 1881 – 1981. Altona. Friesen
Printing, 1981 Brenda History Committee. Bridging Brenda Vol. 1.
Altona. Friesen Printers, 1990 Deloraine History Book Committee.
Deloraine Scans a Century 1880 - 1980: Altona. Friesen Printers, 1980
Committee of the J.A. Victor Museum and New Horizons. Reflections -
Turtle Mountain Municipality and Killarney, 1882- 1982.
Inter-collegiate Press of Canada, 1982
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