The second Riel insurrection

On occasion in the history of Canada personal interest and governmental procrastination in the remedying of grievances, either real or imaginary, have aroused and inflamed passions that resulted in violence and insurrection. In Upper and Lower Canada in 1837, the Red River Valley in 1870 and the pra...

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Main Author: Ridd, Dwight Nugent
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1934
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4710
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/4710 2023-08-27T04:08:08+02:00 The second Riel insurrection Ridd, Dwight Nugent 1934 11550477 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4710 eng eng ocm72800863 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4710 open access The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner. master thesis 1934 ftunivmanitoba 2023-08-06T17:37:24Z On occasion in the history of Canada personal interest and governmental procrastination in the remedying of grievances, either real or imaginary, have aroused and inflamed passions that resulted in violence and insurrection. In Upper and Lower Canada in 1837, the Red River Valley in 1870 and the prairie west in 1885 certain sections of our people, because of religious and social as well as political beliefs and prejudices with varying degrees of justification, or lack of it, have had resort to arms. A study of the second Riel insurrection clearly shows that more care on the part of those in authority and better judgment on the part of those aggrieved, or wiser leadership in their movement of protest, would have rendered unnecessary this last rebellion. The country affected by the regrettable insurrection of 1885 was the broad expanse of territory stretching from the boundaries of the old postage stamp province of Manitoba, west to the foothills of the Rockies, and extending north from the international boundary to the frozen regions of the arctic districts. At the time it was named the North West Territories but was commonly called The Saskatchewan. When the sparsely settled district of the Red River was created in 1870 into the province of Manitoba this wide Saskatchewan lay as a vast hinterland and was unpeopled except for approximately thirty thousand Indians, many groups of nomadic buffalo hunters who were mostly halfbreeds, the clergy at a few scattered missions, and a large number of Hudson Bay officials. The outward flow of immigration had not yet reached the prairie west. Master Thesis Arctic Hudson Bay MSpace at the University of Manitoba Arctic Hudson Bay Canada Hudson
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description On occasion in the history of Canada personal interest and governmental procrastination in the remedying of grievances, either real or imaginary, have aroused and inflamed passions that resulted in violence and insurrection. In Upper and Lower Canada in 1837, the Red River Valley in 1870 and the prairie west in 1885 certain sections of our people, because of religious and social as well as political beliefs and prejudices with varying degrees of justification, or lack of it, have had resort to arms. A study of the second Riel insurrection clearly shows that more care on the part of those in authority and better judgment on the part of those aggrieved, or wiser leadership in their movement of protest, would have rendered unnecessary this last rebellion. The country affected by the regrettable insurrection of 1885 was the broad expanse of territory stretching from the boundaries of the old postage stamp province of Manitoba, west to the foothills of the Rockies, and extending north from the international boundary to the frozen regions of the arctic districts. At the time it was named the North West Territories but was commonly called The Saskatchewan. When the sparsely settled district of the Red River was created in 1870 into the province of Manitoba this wide Saskatchewan lay as a vast hinterland and was unpeopled except for approximately thirty thousand Indians, many groups of nomadic buffalo hunters who were mostly halfbreeds, the clergy at a few scattered missions, and a large number of Hudson Bay officials. The outward flow of immigration had not yet reached the prairie west.
format Master Thesis
author Ridd, Dwight Nugent
spellingShingle Ridd, Dwight Nugent
The second Riel insurrection
author_facet Ridd, Dwight Nugent
author_sort Ridd, Dwight Nugent
title The second Riel insurrection
title_short The second Riel insurrection
title_full The second Riel insurrection
title_fullStr The second Riel insurrection
title_full_unstemmed The second Riel insurrection
title_sort second riel insurrection
publishDate 1934
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4710
geographic Arctic
Hudson Bay
Canada
Hudson
geographic_facet Arctic
Hudson Bay
Canada
Hudson
genre Arctic
Hudson Bay
genre_facet Arctic
Hudson Bay
op_relation ocm72800863
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4710
op_rights open access
The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
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