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Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

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Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province. By: Angelique, Hazel and Christine. Introduction. Introduction. On October 11, 1869, Andre Nault was met a team of land surveyors. That was near LaBarriere Park . Andre tried to tell them that they weren’t allowed on the land. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province By: Angelique, Hazel and Christine.
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Page 1: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

By:Angelique,

Hazel and Christine.

Page 2: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Introduction

Page 3: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Introduction

• On October 11, 1869, Andre Nault was met a team of land surveyors.

• That was near LaBarriere Park.• Andre tried to tell them that they weren’t allowed on

the land. • But the surveyors didn’t speak French. • So Andre went to get help. Out of the 100 people

who came back with Andre, only one knew how to speak English. His name was Louis Riel. Louis told them to leave and they left.

Page 4: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Métis

• They are people with a mix of European background and Aboriginal background.

• They were looked down upon because their mothers were Aboriginals, and Aboriginals were looked down upon even more.

• They lived in a group called the Red River Settlement.

Page 5: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Red River Settlement

• The Métis got mad and worried when they heard about the land surveyors.

• They were worried because:

A. Their land may be taken away and

given the people moving there

B. Their rights might not be permitted

C. Their cultures might not be permitted

Page 6: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Rupert’s Land

• The United States of America wanted Rupert’s Land.

• So did Canada.• So Prime Minister Sir John A. MacDonald

took action.• Hudson’s Bay Company sold Rupert’s land to

Canada.

Page 7: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

MacDonald’s plan for the Métis

• Macdonald’s plan was to take Rupert’s land for English speaking settlers from Canada.

• But no one told the people who already lived there about the transfer.

Page 8: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Arrival of “The King”

Page 9: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

“The King”

• William McDougall was a father of confederation.

• MacDonald chose him as the lieutenant governor of the Northwest Territories.

• McDougall considered himself as the king of the Northwest.

• McDougall had to begin his job in the Red River Settlement on December 1st, 1869.

Page 10: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The “King” in the Red River Settlement

• The settlement was hard to reach.• McDougall and his men had to go through

the U.S. to get to the Red River from Ontario.• In Minnesota, McDougall got a letter saying

that there might be violence when they arrived at Red River.

• People he met along the way told him to expect trouble.

• Some Métis spies were following McDougall and watching his every move.

Page 11: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Meanwhile…

• Louis Riel was organizing the Métis. He formed the Métis National Committee.

• They would talk to McDougall and make sure that they kept their rights. They had lived along the red river for many years and had set up most of the communities there.

Page 12: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The King in Pembina

• When McDougall arrived at Pembina, North Dakota on November 2nd, he met two representatives of the Métis.

• They gave him a letter from Louis Riel. It said that McDougall would not be allowed into the settlement.

• McDougall’s party was forced to stay overnight at Pembina.

Page 13: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The King is sent away

• In the morning, they went to the nearest Hudson’s Bay post on the Canadian side.

• 50 men met him at the post. The men sent McDougall’s party away.

Page 14: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

People of the Red River

• Many different people lived in the red rived. That includes:

1. The French speaking Métis2. The country born Métis3. Descendants of the Selkirk settlers4. Land speculators5. First nations peoples

Page 15: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The population of the Red RiverBy Background

French speaking Métis 5757

English speaking Métis 4083

European or European-Canadian

1565

First Nations 558

Page 16: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The population of the Red Riverby religion

Roman Catholic Protestant

6247 5716

• Total: 11 963 people

Page 17: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Map of the Red River Settlement

Page 18: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Resistance

Page 19: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Resistance

• After turning McDougall away, Riel took over Upper Fort Garry.

• People said that a man named John Schultz had wanted to take over Upper Fort Garry. But Riel had beat him to it.

• The resistance had begun.

Page 20: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Proclamation

• After that, the Métis made a proclamation.• They went through the settlement telling the

people about their plans.• They asked both the Francophone and the

Anglophone communities to form a council.• Every settlement council had to send someone

to speak for that community.• Some supported MacDonald, but most

supported Riel.

Page 21: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Fake Transfer

• On December 1st, 1869, McDougall came to the Settlement with a proclamation.

• He proclaimed that Rupert’s Land already belonged to Canada.

• But that was a fake document. And the Métis didn’t know that MacDonald had postponed the transfer of land.

Page 22: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Meanwhile...

• One day, a surveyor named Colonel John Dennis called on all of the supporters of the Canadian Government to stop the Métis.

• 400 men gathered at the Stone Fort (Another name for Lower Fort Garry) and created their headquarters there.

• Most of the men were new to the prairies. They supported MacDonald.

• They thought it would be a good idea to settle the land with English protestants from Ontario.

Page 23: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Meanwhile...

• John Schultz turned his home into a fort for his force.

• On December 7th, Riel and his men surrounded Schultz’s fort.

• A storekeeper came to talk to both groups. The Storekeeper's name was A.G. Bannatyne.

• Riel ordered the men on the other team to give up. Schultz’ group was imprisoned in Upper Fort Garry.

Page 24: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Provisional Government

• On December 8th, Riel said that his Provisional Government was going to take over. At that time, Upper Fort Garry had no official government.

• McDougall soon then returned to Ottawa.

Page 25: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

• Riel was president of the Provisional Government. He set up a public meeting for January 19, 1870.

• A man named Donald Smith, who worked for the Hudson’s Bay Company for a long time, was sent by MacDonald to speak on behalf of the Canadian Government.

• Smith told the people about what Canada planned for them once they join Canada.

Page 26: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

• Then Riel called on the crowd to set up a council.

• Half would be made up of Francophone people, the other half was made up of Anglophone people. In total, there were 40 people.

• They (The council) would talk to the government in Ottawa.

Page 27: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Side Fact Time!

• On November 2nd, 1869, Riel took over Upper Fort Garry and made it his base. Today, nothing remains but the front gate.

Page 28: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Métis list of rights

• The list below was written by the Métis Provisional Government. This document set out the terms of agreement with the Canadian government to become a new province.

Page 29: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The list of rights

1. The new province would be represented in parliament and the Senate

2. The provincial government would control all the public lands

3. French and English would both be permitted4. An amnesty (the official release of someone

for a crime or for a political offence against a government) would be granted for the provisional government

Page 30: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The list of rights

5. The lieutenant governor and the head of supreme court would be bilingual

6. A steam boat route would be set up between Superior and Fort Garry

7. The provincial government would take all of the province's taxes and use it on public works

Page 31: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The List Of Rights

8. There has to be separate English and French schools

• That last one was only added later. It was copied from the Quebec school system.

• This document was the basis of the Manitoba act, the act that formed Manitoba. But the amnesty wasn’t granted and the Manitobans didn’t gain control of the public lands.

Page 32: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Confrontation

Page 33: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Confrontation

• Seven of the men who were arrested in December had escaped from prison in early January.

• One of them was Thomas Scott, a very unpopular fool.

• John Schultz escaped a few weeks later using a knife that his wife had smuggled to him in the pudding that she sent him.

• The rest were let go in January.

Page 34: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

What happened to Schultz

• After the rest of the men were let go, they met up with other Anti-Riel forces.

• They joined up with the other people against Riel and began ready to march to Riel's headquarters in Upper Fort Garry.

• There, they planned to overthrow the Provisional Government.

Page 35: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

• They came from Portage la Prairie, Lower Fort Garry and Stone Fort, and from St. Norbert.

• The Portage la Prairie group marched eastward to meet up with Schultz’s group.

• On their way to Riel, they were met a wood cutter named Norbert Parisien. He was arrested because he was accused of being a spy.

Page 36: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Parisien

• Parisien soon escaped, and with him he brought one of their guns.

• Parisien was mentally challenged, so when a man rode on horseback up to him, Parisien shot the man and the man later died. Parisien thought that the man might be a man from the Portage la Prairie and Schultz group.

Page 37: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

• The man whom Parisien had shot knew that it was an accident.

• He asked the nearby mob to spare him. They didn’t. They beat him up so much that Parisien died.

• After hearing what happened, Riel called on the calm.

• The some of the men in the mob were arrested. One of them was

Page 38: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Thomas Scott

• In jail, Thomas Scott tried to overpower the guards with nasty insults about their race and Catholic Religion. Succeeding, Scott broke out of his cell.

• Riel’s people wanted to make an example of Scott. Scot was charged with treason against the Provisional Government.

Page 39: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

He Dies • The six man jury voted four to two that Scott

shall have death for his penalty.• On March 4th, 1870, a shooting squad killed

Scott in front of the fort. • His last words were: “ This is horrible. This is

cold blooded murder.”

Page 40: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Alexandre-Antonin Tache • He was the archbishop of St. Boniface and also a

spiritual and political leader for the French-Catholic people of the Red River Settlement.

• In the 1860s, he became worried about the people who were English speaking protestants moving in from Ontario.

• He wanted to make sure that the original languages and cultures in the community would be respected.

• At that time, Tache was travelling to Rome. On the way there, he passed by Ontario to speak to the federal government about his concerns.

Page 41: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

More about Alexandre-Antonin Tache

• In December 1869, Tache was asked to return from Rome by the Canadian government.

• They wanted him to act as an emissary to the people of the red river.

• The government told Tache that the demands of the Provisionary government would be met. He was also told that an amnesty would be granted to all who participated to in the Resistance.

Page 42: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Even More About Tache

• Because Thomas Scott was killed, the amnesty was taken away. Louis Riel was prosecuted for murder of Scott.

• Tache felt like he was lied to by the government. But still, he continued to fight for the amnesty.

Page 43: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

A New Province

Page 44: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The New Province

• MacDonald finally began to talk to the Red River about what he had in store for them.

• Tache had been talking to the government, and that’s why the finally came to talk to the Red River.

• The provisional government was invited to send a send people to Ottawa.

Page 45: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Agreement

• The two groups finally came to an agreement when three men, the first one a priest named father Joseph-Noel Ritchtot, the second, a judge named Judge john Black, and third, Alfred Henry Scott, went to Ontario. (Alfred Henry Scott is NOT related to Thomas Scott.)

• At Ontario, they talked about the terms of entry into Confederation based on the Métis list of rights.

Page 46: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

More About the Agreement

• This is what they agreed about:1. Both English and French would be the main

languages2. Religious rights would be protected3. The Métis would receive title their lands and

a land grant of about 570 000 for the future generations

Page 47: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Manitoba Act

• The Manitoba Act was passed on May 12th, 1870. in came into effect in July 15th, 1870. Manitoba was born.

• At the same time, John Schultz and his Cohort, Charles Mair, were going through Ottawa, trying to influence hate for Riel by telling the people about the murder of Thomas Scott. Many people were furious about it. They demanded that there will be justice done.

Page 48: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Manitobah

• In 1867, before there was such a thing as Manitoba, the town Portage la Prairie became the centre of the Republic of Manitoba.

• A man named Thomas Spence was concerned because the area had no government. He wanted to make it into a recognized part of Canada.

Page 49: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

More About Manitobah

• In January 1868, a council came together to form the Republic of Manitoba.

• Spence tried to raise money for the organization by taxing things. But only a few of the town’s businesses would pay, including the Hudson’s Bay Company.

• But the republic soon collapsed.• Spence then moved on and became the editor of

John Schultz’s Nor’wester newspaper and Louis Riel’s New Nation.

Page 50: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Manitoba?

• Everybody please look at the blue letter ON PAGE 30.

• Can I have a volunteer to read it.• This letter shows that the three men who

talked to the Federal government had picked our name.

Page 51: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Wolseley Expedition

• In June 1870 John A. Macdonald sent a 1100 men on a “friendly expedition.”

• These men were to make sure that the change of the government was done peacefully.

• Many of the men who were sent on the expedition had read Anti-Riel articles.

• Riel had sent guides to help the expedition.

Page 52: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

The Wolseley Expedition 2

• They listened to the fireside chat of the solders.

• They reported that the troops are were set on revenge

• The force was led by Colonel Garnet Wolseley.

• They arrived at the at red river in the late August 1870 after a difficult trip.

Page 53: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Riel`s Escape

+

• Louis Riel was afraid that the soilders wanted to kill him.

• So just a few hours before the force returned Riel ran away to the south.

Page 54: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

What Force Did

• The men who were sent by the federal government were not actually their to see if there was peace.

• They were there to punish the people of the Red River Settlement for putting up a resistance.

• The men killed, beated and looted many people.

Page 55: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

What the force did • Andre Nault, the man who had spotted the

surveying party the year before, was beaten and left for dead.

• Nualt live lived by the number of people were killed.

• These included men who was on Scott’s jury, one who owner of a well–known saloon in the town.

• The takeover of Manitoba, witch the residents had so feared, had began. But the people have a province, with their historic rights guaranteed

Page 56: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

After the Red River Resistance

• Even though he was living in exile in the united states, Riel was elected to Canadian parliament to represent the riding of proven her in 1873.

• However, Riel was a wanted man.• Charged by Scott’s murder, he took his seat as

the member of the parliament. • Still, he is considered by many Canadian as the

founder of Manitoba.

Page 57: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Conclusion

• After Manitoba became a province life began to change for the Métis people.

• New people started to settle in Manitoba.• The new settlers soon gained power in the

new province.• The Métis began to lose their rights in the

province.• Métis had trouble proving their ownership.

Page 58: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Conclusion 2

• Their way of life started to fade away just like the bison because they were the prey of everyone.

• After this the Métis started to move elsewhere.

• The Métis moved farther into the north west, or to the united states just near the border.

Page 59: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Manitoba, now and then

• Legend:• Yellow-1870• Blue-1881• Orange-1912

Page 60: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

• Diorama time!1st: Manitoba - old times2nd: Manitoba – today

Page 61: Chapter Two: Manitoba Becomes a Province

Thank You

• Thank you for listening

• This is the end of our speech

• Hoped you learned alot


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