John A. MacDonald offered a deal for them, but it was one that wouldn't really work out that well. The Manitoba Act said they could have 1,400,000 acres (which sounds great!) but the plots would not be choice ones, and would be distributed by a lottery (no longer quite so great). The problem with the lottery system is it would be administered in the English way, not the French one - that would mean that most of the land plots wouldn't have access to water as they went by a square plots system rather than long strips that connect to the river, and thus most land zones would lose most of their value.
You know Dumont's manly musk is so strong you could bottle it. |
Seeing his people in distress, Dumont convinces Riel to come back, who at the time was working as a teacher in the United States. His return is greeted with cheers and hope, at least from the common public. Louis finds an unexpected enemy; the church. Riel considers himself a prophet who will lead the New World to become great, the "new Rome" being in Saskatchewan of all places (well, that didn't pan out). Upon finding so many followers for his cause he began to usurp much of the political power the church held which understandably upset the Catholic priests who had previously been the guiding hand of the community. The confrontation escalated so high they threatened to brand him a heretic, which, to be fair, is the direction most self-proclaimed prophets find themselves in. Down the line Riel would be excommunicated from the church.
Chief Poundmaker, also known as Pitikwahanapiwiyin. His friends called him Pete. |
Regardless of what they were planning, the Metis of Red River were clearly... well, planning something. But more nefariously. I suppose you could call it plotting. Anyways, the police came in to sweep them out. The Metis got word of this and realized that in order to shoot at anyone hoping to send them out of their land, they needed something to shoot with. Guns and ammo were low on supply and Dumont raided an English speaker's store, taking his wares and keeping him as prisoner. Leading from the town of Batoche, he raids more stores and gathers followers as he goes. Dumont is an excellent leader, able to get the upper hand on his enemies through his abilities in tracking and general outdoorsy talents, and if there's one man to stand against the tide of Canadian forces coming to clear him out it's him. Still, he needed more weaponry and knew how to get it: a nearby fort would be easily taken and would provide them with all the supplies they needed. However, there was one thing that stood in the way. Louis Riel.
Riel and Dumont held the same goals in mind (a unified Metis culture, separate from the eastern Canadian forces) but wanted to go about it in entirely different ways. Riel wanted as little bloodshed as possible, a problem that will continue to hamper Dumont throughout the campaign. This was just the first example, Riel urging Dumont to steer clear of the fort. Dumont listened to Louis, perhaps because of the strong influence Riel had in the community, or perhaps because he also believed him to be the prophet he claimed himself to be. It's a shame his plans didn't pan out. It would be cool if Saskatchewan became the "New Rome" he wanted it to be. Instead, we get this.
The aboriginals nearby weren't too sure if they were to join after the victory at Duck Lake. Riel seemed to want what they wanted; a freedom of movement on the lands west of Canada and a right to uphold their beliefs and culture. However, he was still following the white God, which wasn't really cool in their books. From a purely practical perspective, inciting the wrath of the Canadian government was a risky move, and one that would likely prove dangerous down the road. It splintered the natives; three major leaders, Poundmaker, Wandering Spirit, and Big Bear all saw it differently. Big Bear was the most reluctant, Wandering Spirit the most willing to go on the offensive.
Wandering Spirit took a number of his soldiers and attacked the town of Frog Lake about a week after the battle at Duck Lake. Meant to take supplies, prisoners were rounded up but shooting began causing the deaths of nine settlers. This prompted the Canadian government to start sending soldiers, more than just the local police, to take out the rebellion once and for all.
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