“Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885

How did marginalized and racialized ethnic immigrants transform themselves into active, armed colonial agents in nineteenth-century Western Canada? Approximately twenty Icelanders enlisted to fight Louis Riel’s forces during the North-West Resistance in 1885, just ten years following the arrival of...

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Published in:Canadian Historical Review
Main Author: Bertram, Laurie K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022
https://utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022
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spelling crunivtoronpr:10.3138/chr-102-s1-022 2023-12-31T10:06:32+01:00 “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885 Bertram, Laurie K. 2021 http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022 https://utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022 en eng University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) Canadian Historical Review volume 102, issue s1, page s309-s338 ISSN 0008-3755 1710-1093 Religious studies History journal-article 2021 crunivtoronpr https://doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022 2023-12-01T08:18:24Z How did marginalized and racialized ethnic immigrants transform themselves into active, armed colonial agents in nineteenth-century Western Canada? Approximately twenty Icelanders enlisted to fight Louis Riel’s forces during the North-West Resistance in 1885, just ten years following the arrival of Icelandic immigrants in present-day Manitoba. Forty more reportedly enlisted in an Icelandic-Canadian battalion to enforce the government’s victory in the fall. This public, armed stance of a group of Icelanders against Indigenous forces in 1885 is somewhat unexpected, since most Icelanders were relatively recent arrivals in the West and, in Winnipeg, members of the largely unskilled urban working class. Moreover, they were widely rumoured among Winnipeggers to be from a “blubber-eating race” and of “Eskimo” extraction; community accounts testify to the discrimination numerous early Icelanders faced in the city. These factors initially make Icelanders unexpected colonialists, particularly since nineteenth-century ethnic immigration and colonial suppression so often appear as separate processes in Canadian historiography. Indeed, this scholarship is characterized by an enduring belief that Western Canadian colonialism was a distinctly Anglo sin. Ethnic immigrants often appear in scholarly and popular histories as sharing a history of marginalization with Indigenous people that prevented migrants from taking part in colonial displacement. Proceeding from the neglected history of Icelandic enlistment in 1885 and new developments in Icelandic historiography, this article argues that rather than negating ethnic participation in Indigenous suppression, ethnic marginality and the class tensions it created could actually fuel participation in colonial campaigns, which promised immigrants upward mobility, access to state support, and land. Article in Journal/Newspaper eskimo* University of Toronto Press (U Toronto Press - via Crossref) Canadian Historical Review 102 s1 s309 s338
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto Press (U Toronto Press - via Crossref)
op_collection_id crunivtoronpr
language English
topic Religious studies
History
spellingShingle Religious studies
History
Bertram, Laurie K.
“Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
topic_facet Religious studies
History
description How did marginalized and racialized ethnic immigrants transform themselves into active, armed colonial agents in nineteenth-century Western Canada? Approximately twenty Icelanders enlisted to fight Louis Riel’s forces during the North-West Resistance in 1885, just ten years following the arrival of Icelandic immigrants in present-day Manitoba. Forty more reportedly enlisted in an Icelandic-Canadian battalion to enforce the government’s victory in the fall. This public, armed stance of a group of Icelanders against Indigenous forces in 1885 is somewhat unexpected, since most Icelanders were relatively recent arrivals in the West and, in Winnipeg, members of the largely unskilled urban working class. Moreover, they were widely rumoured among Winnipeggers to be from a “blubber-eating race” and of “Eskimo” extraction; community accounts testify to the discrimination numerous early Icelanders faced in the city. These factors initially make Icelanders unexpected colonialists, particularly since nineteenth-century ethnic immigration and colonial suppression so often appear as separate processes in Canadian historiography. Indeed, this scholarship is characterized by an enduring belief that Western Canadian colonialism was a distinctly Anglo sin. Ethnic immigrants often appear in scholarly and popular histories as sharing a history of marginalization with Indigenous people that prevented migrants from taking part in colonial displacement. Proceeding from the neglected history of Icelandic enlistment in 1885 and new developments in Icelandic historiography, this article argues that rather than negating ethnic participation in Indigenous suppression, ethnic marginality and the class tensions it created could actually fuel participation in colonial campaigns, which promised immigrants upward mobility, access to state support, and land.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bertram, Laurie K.
author_facet Bertram, Laurie K.
author_sort Bertram, Laurie K.
title “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
title_short “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
title_full “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
title_fullStr “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
title_full_unstemmed “Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885
title_sort “eskimo” immigrants and colonial soldiers: icelandic immigrants and the north-west resistance, 1885
publisher University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
publishDate 2021
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022
https://utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022
genre eskimo*
genre_facet eskimo*
op_source Canadian Historical Review
volume 102, issue s1, page s309-s338
ISSN 0008-3755 1710-1093
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s1-022
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